STATEMENT AS TO RIGHTS TO INVENTIONS MADE UNDER FEDERALLY-SPONSORED RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
[0001] The U.S. Government has a paid-up license in this invention and the right in limited
circumstances to require the patent owner to license others on reasonable terms as
provided for by the terms of grant no. SSS-C(3) 1 R43 HD21323-01 ENG awarded by the
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Department of Health and
Human Services and grant no. 2R44 HD21323-02.
Field Of The Invention
[0002] This invention relates to human somatomedin carrier protein subunits and to processes
for producing them. More particularly, this invention relates to carrier protein subunits
that bind to human somatomedin-like polypeptides, also known as insulin-like growth
factors. In addition, this invention relates to essentially pure human somatomedin
carrier protein subunits. This invention also relates to processes of preparing such
carrier protein subunits from human plasma. The process involves preparation from
a human serum fraction, Cohn IV-1, by a sequence of various chromatographic steps.
The carrier protein subunits and methods of this invention may be used in a variety
of therapeutic, diagnostic or other useful applications.
[0003] This invention also relates to DNA molecules encoding human somatomedin carrier protein-like
polypeptides, recombinant DNA molecules, hosts transformed with such molecules, processes
for producing human somatomedin carrier protein-like polypeptides, and human somatomedin
carrier protein-like polypeptides produced using those molecules, hosts and processes.
More particularly, the invention relates to DNA molecules and their expression in
appropriate hosts. The recombinant DNA molecules contain DNA molecules that code for
polypeptides which have a biological activity of the human carrier protein. As will
be appreciated from the disclosure to follow, the DNA molecules, recombinant DNA molecules,
hosts, and processes of this invention may be used in the production of polypeptides
useful in a variety of therapeutic, diagnostic, and other useful applications.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0004] Somatomedins (also sometimes referred to as "SMs") are hormones having useful biological
properties. SMs are polypeptides having a molecular weight of approximately 7,500
daltons. SMs (a) mediate the growth-promoting effects of growth hormone (also sometimes
referred to as "GH"), (b) have weak insulin-like activity (and for that reason are
also called "insulin-like growth factors" or "IGFs"), (c) are mitogenic for a variety
of skeletal and other tissues and (d) are transported in plasma bound to a large carrier
protein. There are two SM compositions in humans. SM-C is a basic polypeptide and
is sometimes referred to as SM-C. SM-C mediates the growth promoting actions of GH
after birth. SM-A is a mixture primarily of a polypeptide known as IGF-II and variable
amounts of a modified form of SM-C. Spencer, E.M., et al., "The Identity Of Human
Insulin-like Growth Factors I and II With Somatomedins C and A With Rat SM I and II"
in
Insulin-like Growth Factors/Somatomedins; ed. Spencer, E.M. (Walter de Gruyter 1983). IGF-II is less GH dependent and may
have a role in fetal growth.
[0005] SMs may be useful
in vivo to stimulate bone formation (for example, in treatment of osteoporosis), wound healing,
and the growth of animals and GH-deficient humans. Serum levels of SM-C are measured
to diagnose acromegaly, pituitary gigantism, GH deficiency, and other growth related
conditions. Spencer, E.M., "Somatomedins" in
Basic and Clinical Endocrinology, eds. Greenspan F. S. and Forsham, P. H. (1986), p. 89, Appleton-Century-Crofts.
SMs are also employed to stimulate
in vitro the proliferation of a variety of cells in tissue culture and, therefore, are useful
in the study of the regulation of normal and abnormal cell growth. SMs produced by
certain breast and kidney cancer cells may stimulate the proliferation of both the
cancer cells and the vascular and fibrous tissues required to support the growth of
the cancer tissues. Spencer, E. M. et al., "Possible Auto-stimulation of Human Mammary
Carcinoma Growth by Somatomedins," Annals of the N.Y. Acad. Sci., 464, p. 448 (1986);
Huff, K.K., et al., "Secretion of Insulin-like Growth Factor-I-related Protein by
Human Breast Cancer Cells," Cancer Research 46, pp. 4613-4619 (1986). Blocking the
action of SMs may be useful to control the growth of these cancers.
[0006] Human SMs appear to be transported and regulated
in vivo by other proteins. Hintz, R. L. et al., "Demonstration of Specific Plasma Protein
Binding Sites For Somatomedin,"
J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 45, p. 988 (1977). These proteins appear to bind to the SMs and regulate the biological
activity of the SMs
in vivo. Gel filtration of human serum at neutral pH has shown that 95% of the immunoreactive
SM-C activity, and probably IGF-II activity, elutes at about 150,000 to 160,000 daltons
(150-160 kilodaltons or "kDa") with a minor amount in the range of 35-50 kDa. Only
a very small amount of immunoreactive activity elutes at 7.5 kDa, where free SMs should
appear. Smith, G. L.,
Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology 34, p. 83-89 (1984). This indicates that SMs are complexed with larger proteins in
plasma.
[0007] At least two different classes of proteins or protein complexes in human plasma have
been reported to bind SMs. Drop, S. L. et al., "Immunoassay Of A Somatomedin-binding
Protein From Human Amniotic Fluid; Levels In Fetal, Neonatal, And Adult Sera,"
J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 59, p. 908 (1984); Wilkins, J. R. et al., "Affinity-labeled Plasma Somatomedin-C+/Insulin-like
Growth Factor I Binding Proteins,"
J. Clin. Invest. 75, p. 1350 (1985). This description refers to one class of those native proteins
or protein complexes as the SM "Carrier Protein" for its function appears to be the
transport of SMs. This term is not intended to indicate that the carrier protein is
a single protein. There may be more than one carrier protein and it may be a protein
complex. This description refers to the other class as the "Amniotic Fluid Binding
Protein" or "AFBP." There may be more than one AFBP. It is also possible that additional
classes of proteins or protein complexes that bind SMs will be discovered.
[0008] Carrier protein activity, like SM-C activity, is GH-dependent, being low in persons
with GH deficiency and elevated in patients with GH-producing tumors, a condition
known as acromegaly. White, R. M., et al., "The Growth Hormone Dependence Of Somatomedin-binding
Protein In Human Serum,"
J. Clin Endocrinol Metab. 53, p. 49 (1981). The carrier protein displays biological properties indicative of
potentially valuable uses.
In vivo, when SMs bind to carrier protein, the half-life of the SMs is reported to increase
from approximately one hour to up to about 24 hours depending on the animal species
tested (Cohen, K. L. et al., "The Serum Half-life Of Somatomedin Activity: Evidence
For Growth Hormone Dependence,"
Acta Endocrinol. 83, p. 243 (1976)), and the SMs are rendered inactive until released. Studies in
other model systems suggest that impure preparations containing the carrier protein
(a) abolish the metabolic action of the SMs on the perfused rat heart (Meuli C., et
al., "NSILA-carrier Protein Abolishes The Action Of Nonsuppressible Insulin-like Activity
(NSILA-s) On Perfused Rat Heart,"
Diabetologia 14, p. 255 (1978)), (b) inhibit the mitogenic effect of the SMs on cells in culture
(Knauer, D. J.,
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 77, pp. 7252-7256 (1980) and Kuffer, A. D., et al., "Partial Purification Of A Specific
Inhibitor Of The Insulin-like Growth Factors By Reversed Phase High-performance Liquid
Chromatography," J. of Chromatography, 336, pp. 87-92 (1984) and (c) block the insulin-like
activity of SMs on rat adipose tissue (Zapf, J., et al., "Inhibition Of The Action
Of Nonsuppressible Insulin-like Activity On Isolated Rat Rat Cells By Binding To
Its Carrier Protein,"
J. Clin Invest. 63, p. 1077 (1979). Partially pure preparations of the carrier protein have been
used with radiolabeled SMs in research to conduct competitive binding assays for measuring
SMs. Moses, A. C., et al.,
Endocrinology 104, p. 536 (1979).
[0009] Because of their valuable biological properties, there have been many efforts to
isolate and characterize the carrier protein or the subunits of the carrier protein
responsible for that activity. Prior to this invention, all attempts to isolate and
characterize in pure form the carrier protein or its active subunits have failed.
This is due in part to the low concentration of carrier protein in plasma. A successful
purification procedure also had to solve the problems of loss of activity because
of enzymatic digestion and instability of the carrier protein, especially to changes
in pH. Purification of the carrier protein subunits is further complicated by the
presence in plasma of the AFBP, which also binds to somatomedins.
[0010] The carrier protein is a glycoprotein. In serum at neutral pH, it is bound with SMs
and the complex has a molecular weight of about 150-160 kDa when measured by gel filtration.
The molecular weight of the carrier protein complex at neutral pH has also been determined
by other methods to be about 125 kDa. Gel filtration chromatography of serum or plasma
under acid conditions has been reported to separate bound SMs from the carrier protein
and to give rise to a unit of the carrier protein that has a molecular weight of about
40-50 kDa. That unit also binds to somatomedins. Hintz, R. L., et al., "Demonstration
Of Specific Plasma Protein Binding Sites For Somatomedin,"
J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 45, p. 988 (1977). Since the 40-50 kDa acid-stable unit cannot by induced to reform
the 150-160 kDa carrier protein complex, others have suggested that the carrier protein
may also be composed in part of an acid-labile unit that does not itself bind to somatomedins.
Moses, A. C., et al.,
Endocrinology 104, p. 536 (1979). Furlanetto reported treating serum with a 35-55% ammonium sulfate
solution, isolating the precipitate, dissolving the precipitate in 0.05 M Tris, pH
8.20 and chromatographing on DEAE Sephadex A-50 with Tris buffers. Furlanetto, R.
W., "The Somatomedin C Binding Protein: Evidence For A Heterologous Subunit Structure,"
J. Clin, Endocrinol Metab. 51, p. 12 (1980). Furlanetto did not disclose any further purification. Rather, Furlanetto
conducted experiments with various fractions to confirm his view that the somatomedin-C
binding activity in serum is composed of at least two units, one has a Stokes' radius
of 36 A° and binds SM-C (the so-called acid stable unit) and the other has Stokes'
radius of 30-38 A° and does not bind SM-C (the so-called acid labile unit)).
[0011] Wilkins identified, by affinity labeling, plasma proteins that complexed with SM-C.
Wilkins, J. R., et al., "Affinity-labeled Plasma Somatomedin-C/Insulin-like Growth
Factor I Binding Proteins,"
J. Clin. Invest., 75, p. 1350 (1985). ¹²⁵I-SM-C was covalently cross-linked to proteins that bound
SM-C in whole plasma and in Sephadex G-200 fractions of plasma. Following sodium
dodecylsulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography, the AFBP was
identified in addition to species of about 160, 110, 80, 50 and 25 kDa. Wilkins et
al. hypothesized that the 160 kDa carrier protein complex consisted of 6 approximately
25 kDa (24-28 kDa) subunit complexes, each composed of the subunit plus SM-C. However,
Wilkins et al., did not report isolation or purification of this 25 kDa subunit. Another
worker proposed, but did not establish, a slightly larger subunit structure. Daughaday,
W. H., et al., "Characterization Of Somatomedin Binding in Human Serum By Ultracentrifugation
And Gel Filtration,"
J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 55, p. 916 (1982).
[0012] Several workers have reported unsuccessful attempts to isolate the acid-stable 40-50
kDa carrier protein unit from human plasma. Draznin et al., reported a material containing
only 1% SM binding activity and did not disclose whether this material originated
from carrier protein or AFBP. Draznin, B., et al., in "Somatomedins and Growth,"
eds. G. Giordano et al. (Academic Press 1979) pp. 149-160. Fryklund et al., fractionated
fresh frozen human plasma by polyethylene glycol precipitation, carboxymethyl-Sephadex
chromatography, and gel filtration. Fryklund, L., et al., in
Hormones and Cell Culture, eds G. H. Sato et al. (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 1979) pp. 49-59. Fryklund
et al., proposed that the carrier protein consisted of 2 dissimilar chains of 35 and
45 kDa. Fryklund et al., disclosed that glycine was released by N-terminal molecule
analysis, but did not identify from which chain it originated or whether both ended
in glycine. The reported binding activity of the Fryklund et al. preparation was very
low and purity was not reported. Fryklund et al. did not establish whether the carrier
protein or the AFBP was present in their preparation. Morris et al., reported obtaining
crude SM binding fractions by acetic acid extraction of human Cohn fraction IV, incubation
with ¹²⁵I-IGF-I and chromatography on Sephacryl S-200. Morris, D. H., et al., "Structure
of Somatomedin-binding Protein: Alkaline pH-Induced Dissociation of an Acid-Stable,
60,000 Molecular Weight Complex Into Smaller Components,"
Endocrinology 111, pp. 801-805 (1982). Morris et al. described fractions containing bound radioactive
SM-C with apparent molecular weights of 60,000 and 46,000. Morris et al. reported
that exposing these fractions to pH 8.0 resulted in a shift of ¹²⁵I-IGF-I binding
activity from 60,000 and 46,000 daltons to fractions with complexes of 46,000 and
30,000. These fractions were not further purified. Martin et al. reported preparing
a polyclonal antibody to the acid-stable unit. The latter was isolated by extracting
human Cohn fraction IV with 2 M acetic acid, 75mM NaCl. After removal of SMs by adsorption
to SP-Sephadex, the acid stable unit was obtained by IGF-II-Affinity Chromatography
and used for immunization. Martin et al. disclosed that HPLC could further purify
the acid stable unit. No data was supplied to establish the purity of their final
product. Martin, J. L., et al. "Antibody Against Acid-Stable Insulin-Like Growth Factor
Binding Protein Detects 150,000 Molecular Weight Hormone-Dependent Complex In Human
Plasma,"
J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 261, pp. 799-801 (1985). Kuffer et al. reported a partial purification of what he
described as an inhibitor of insulin-like growth factors (SMs). Kuffer, A. D. et al.,
"Partial Purification of A Specific Inhibitor of the Insulin-Like Growth Factors By
Reverse Phase High-Performance Liquid Chromatography,"
J. of Chromatography, 336, pp. 87-92 (1984). Kuffer et al. prepared SM inhibitors having a molecular weight
of 16,000 to 18,000 from Cohn fraction IV-1 by ion exchange chromatography and sequential
gel chromatography under acid conditions on Sephadex G-75 and Bio-Gel P-30 columns.
After affinity chromatography and high performance liquid chromatography, Kuffer et
al. obtained the "inhibitory activity" as two peaks of activity, corresponding "to
a major, apparently homogeneous, protein peak and a minor heterologous peak." Kuffer
et al. did not report isolation of the activity of either peak.
[0013] None of the above studies disclose a class of human carrier protein subunits capable
of binding somatomedin-like polypeptides. In addition, none of these studies disclose
any subunits of the carrier protein capable of binding SMs and purified to homogeneity.
Purity is required to establish that the carrier protein has been isolated instead
of the AFBP or a contaminant and to study biologic activity. An impure preparation
may contain enzymes, causing the product to be unstable, and easily degraded or denatured.
Impure preparations also cannot be used in animals and humans, because many impurities
present in original serum or produced as a result of the purification procedures,
are antigenic and could produce unwanted biologic effects. For example, human use
in osteoporosis requires removal of all contaminants, which may be antigenic or have
adverse biologic effects.
[0014] Other workers have isolated a different protein capable of binding SMs and obtained
from mid-gestational amniotic fluid of humans, the amniotic fluid binding protein
or "AFBP." The AFBP is not the carrier protein or a subunit of the carrier protein.
Wilkins, J. R. et al., "Affinity-labeled Plasma Somatomedin-C/Insulin-like Growth
Factor I Binding Proteins,"
J. Clin. Invest. 75, p. 1350 (1985). The AFBP (a) is smaller than the so-called acid-stable unit
of the carrier protein, having a molecular weight in the range 32-40 kDa, (b) is not
glycosylated, (c) differs from the carrier protein subunits of this invention in
its reported N-terminal molecule (Povoa, G. et al., "Isolation And Characterization
of A Somatomedin-binding Protein From Mid-term Human Amniotic Fluid,"
Eur. J. Biochem. 144, pp. 199-204 (1984)), and (d) has different immunologic properties. Drop, S.
L. S. et al., "Immunoassay of A Somatomedin-Binding Protein From Human Amniotic Fluid:
Levels In Fetal, Neonatal and Adult Sera,"
J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 59, p. 908 (1984); Martin, J. L. et al.,
supra,
J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 61, pp. 799-801 (1985). Antisera to the AFBP do not cross-react with the 150 kDa
carrier protein or its acid-stable unit. Drop et al. reported that the AFBP levels
determined by radio-immunoassay (RIA) were found to decrease during infancy and childhood
- the inverse of the carrier protein - and also, unlike the carrier protein, to have
a significant diurnal variation. Enberg also isolated the AFBP from adult human plasma
by four chromatographic steps: CM-Affigel blue, hydroxylapatite, fast protein liquid
chromatography gel permeation and high performance liquid chromatography ("HPLC")
hydroxylapatite. Enberg, G., "Purification of A High Molecular Weight Somatomedin
Binding Protein From Human Plasma,"
Biochem. and Biophy. Res. Commun., 135, pp. 178-82 (1986). Enberg reported a "possible" N-terminal molecule, Ala-Pro-Trp-,
demonstrating that the AFBP was isolated, not the 150 kDa carrier protein as Enberg
erroneously concluded.
[0015] Proteins that bind SMs have also been identified in cell culture extracts (e.g.,
Adams, S. O., et al.
Endocrinology 115, pp. 520-526 (1984)). Thus far, the carrier protein has not been isolated. Spencer
first showed that primary cultures of liver cells produced a protein that complexes
with SMs. Spencer, E. M, "The Use Of Cultured Rat Hepatocytes To Study The Synthesis
Of Somatomedin And Its Binding Protein,"
FEBS Letters, 99, p. 157, (1979). Subsequently, several cell types, normal and abnormal, have
been found to synthesize a protein that complexes with SMs. Cultured Buffalo rat liver
tumor cells (BRL 3A) produce a 33 kDa SM binding protein that differs from the carrier
protein by antibody reactivity, N-terminal amino acid molecule, and absence of glycosylation.
Lyons R. M. et al., Characterization of Multiplication-Stimulatory Activity "MSA"
Carrier Protein,"
Molecular and Cellular Endocrinol. 45, pp. 263-70 (1978). Mottola. C. et al.,
J. of Biol. Chem., 261, pp. 1180-88 (1986). Romanus et al. reported that antibodies to this binding
protein cross-reacted with a protein present in fetal serum but not adult rat serum.
Romanus, J. A. et al., "Insulin-like Growth Factor Carrier Proteins In Neonatal And
Adult Rat Serum Are Immunologically Different: Demonstration Using A New Radioimmunoassay
For The Carrier Protein From BRL-3A Rat Liver Cells,"
Endocrinology, 118, p. 1743 (1986). The BRL-3A binding protein may be the rodent equivalent of
the AFBP, but the N-terminal molecule data show no similarity between the two molecules.
[0016] Many proteins and polypeptides have been produced by use of recombinant DNA techniques.
There is no published report of production of carrier protein-like polypeptides in
this manner. There are numerous obstacles to using the techniques of recombinant DNA
technology to clone and express a carrier protein-like polypeptide gene. Obtaining
a gene encoding a carrier protein-like polypeptide is difficult for a variety of reasons.
Prior to the invention, the protein sequences of the carrier protein and the carrier
protein subunits were unknown and, therefore, DNA molecules that would code for the
subunits were unknown. No human tissue source was established. Fibroblasts had been
shown to produce small amount of a large uncharacterized SM binding protein (Adams,
S. O., et al.
Endocrinology 115, pp. 520-526 (1984)). While liver is the major source of somatomedins, it had
never been shown to produce the carrier protein. In addition, the liver is difficult
to use to isolate mRNA, due to ribonucleases. The quantities of carrier protein in
serum are very low. Thus, mRNA might be rare. The genome including a DNA molecule
coding for the carrier protein may contain intervening sequences. For these and other
reasons, many pitfalls faced the conventional approach to attempt to isolate a gene
encoding a carrier protein-like polypeptide -- namely, identifying a source of mRNA
containing large amounts of the desired molecule, creating a library of cDNA from
that mRNA, screening the library with oligonucleotide probes designed to hybridize
with cDNA having the desired molecule, and isolating or assembling a gene from those
cDNA molecules.
DISCLOSURE OF THE INVENTION
[0017] In this description, the following terms are employed:
[0018] Somatomedin-like - A polypeptide displaying the biological activities of one of the human SMs or insulin-like
growth factors, including but not limited to SM-C, SM-A, IGF-I and IGF-II. That polypeptide
may have amino acids in addition to those of native human SMs or it may not include
all the amino acids of native human SMs.
[0019] Carrier Protein - A glycoprotein or complex of glycoproteins in human plasma, displaying the ability
to regulate the biological activity of the human SMs
in vivo by a process involving binding of the SM-like polypeptides, being growth hormone
dependent, and exhibiting an apparent molecular weight of about 125,000-160,000
daltons in physiological pH conditions when complexed with SMs. The carrier protein
may also be polymorphic. For example, cells of different individuals may produce
carrier protein species which are phys iologically similar, but structurally slightly
different from the prototype.
[0020] Subunit - A polypeptide fragment, part, or component of a larger protein unit. The term subunit
is not confined to its customary meaning of a discrete polypeptide chain bound by
covalent or any other types of bonds to another discrete polypeptide chain.
[0021] Carrier Protein Subunits - A class of subunits of the carrier protein.
[0022] Polypeptide - A linear chain of amino acids connected by peptide bonds. A polypeptide may also
contain one or more disulfide bonds between cystines of the same amino acid chain.
[0023] Carrier Protein-like Polypeptide - A polypeptide displaying a human somatomedin regulating biological activity of
the carrier protein and being capable of binding somatomedin-like polypeptides. Preferably,
a carrier protein-like polypeptide displays a somatomedin-C regulating activity of
the carrier protein. A carrier protein-like polypeptide may be a carrier protein subunit
capable of binding somatomedin-like polypeptides, if it possesses such somatomedin
regulating activity. This polypeptide may include one or more amino acids in addition
to those of the carrier protein or such carrier protein subunits. This polypeptide
may not include all of the amino acids of the carrier protein or such carrier protein
subunits because one or more amino acids have been deleted or because one or more
amino acids have been substituted for others. Thus, a carrier protein-like polypeptide
may have the amino acid sequence of the carrier protein or of a carrier protein subunit
in which an amino acid residue has been added, deleted or substituted. A carrier protein-like
polypeptide may have the natural glycosyltion of the carrier protein, may lack the
natural glycosylation of the carrier protein, or may have glycosyltion different from
the natural glycosylation of the carrier protein. Thus, a carrier protein-like polypeptide
may be unaccompanied by the associated natural glycosylation of the carrier protein.
This polypeptide preferably has a molecular weight of about 40,000-50,000 daltons
or less, if measured in a form accompanied by natural glycosylation. This polypeptide
more preferably has a molecular weight of about 30,000 daltons or less, if measured
in that form.
[0024] Somatomedin-C ("SM-C" or "IGF-I") - The principle hormone regulating growth after birth. SM-C
mediates the growth promoting action of GH and binds to the carrier protein.
[0025] Nucleotide - A monomeric unit of DNA or RNA consisting of a sugar moiety (pentose), a phosphate,
and a heterocyclic base. The four DNA bases are adenine ("A"), guanine ("G"), cytosine
("C"), and thymine ("T"). The four RNA bases are A, G, C, and uracil ("U").
[0026] DNA Molecule - A molecule other than the entire human genome composed of a sequence of nucleotides
connected one to the other by phosphodiester bonds between the 3′ and 5′ carbons
of adjacent pentoses. A DNA molecule may be composed of an isolated sequence of nucleotides
that are part of the human genome. A DNA molecule may be composed of a single DNA
molecule (commonly called "single stranded DNA") or two DNA molecules composed of
complementary nucleotides (commonly called "double stranded DNA").
[0027] Recombinant DNA Molecule - A DNA molecule having at least one nucleotide sequence resulting from joining or
adding together at least two DNA molecules.
[0028] Genome - The entire DNA of a cell or a virus. It includes the genes coding for the polypeptides
of the organism, as well as operators, promoters and ribosome binding and other interaction
sites.
[0029] Gene - A DNA molecule which encodes through its mRNA a sequence of amino acids of a specific
polypeptide.
[0030] cDNA - A double-stranded DNA molecule produced from an RNA molecule by using that RNA
as a template for RNA-directed synthesis of the first DNA strand followed by using
that DNA strand as a template for DNA-directed synthesis of the second DNA strand.
[0031] Transcription - The process of producing mRNA from a gene.
[0032] Translation - The process of producing a polypeptide from mRNA.
[0033] Expression - The process of producing a polypeptide by transcription and translation.
[0034] Plasmid - A nonchromosomal double-stranded DNA molecule comprising an intact "replicon" such
that the molecule is replicated in a host organism. When the plasmid is placed within
a single celled organism, the characteristics of that organism may be changed as a
result of the DNA of the plasmid. A cell transformed by a plasmid is called a "transformant."
[0035] Virus - DNA or RNA molecules in a protein envelope or coat capable of infecting a cell
or organism.
[0036] Phage or Bacteriophage - Bacterial virus.
[0037] Vehicle or Vector - A plasmid, phage, mammalian virus, cosmid, or other DNA molecule which is able
to be transformed into and to replicate in a host, having one or more sites at which
such DNA molecules may be cut in a determinable fashion without loss of an essential
biological function of the DNA, e.g., replication, production of coat proteins or
loss of promoter or binding sites, and having a marker suitable for use in the identification
of a transformed host, e.g., tetracycline resistance.
[0038] Cloning - A process of obtaining a population of organisms, cells or DNA molecules derived
from one such organism, cell or DNA molecule.
[0039] Expression Control Sequence - A DNA sequence that controls and regulates expression of genes when operatively
linked to those genes. They include the
lac system, the
trp system, the
tac system, the
trc system, major operator and promoter regions of phage λ, the T7 system, the control
region of fd coat protein, the control sequences of SV-40, the actin system, the metallothionein
system, the LTR (promoter-containing long terminal repeat of retroviruses) system,
and other sequences known to control the expression of genes of prokaryotic or eukaryotic
cells or organisms and their viruses or combinations thereof.
[0040] Host, Host Organism or Host Cell - A prokaryotic or eukaryotic cell or organism capable of being transformed by a
vehicle or vector.
Carrier Protein Subunits
[0041] The invention solves the problems referred to by making available human carrier protein
subunits capable of binding somatomedin-like polypeptides. The ability of the carrier
protein subunits of the invention to bind somatomedin-like polypeptides has been demonstrated
by binding those subunits
in vitro to somatomedin-C at about physiological pH. This binding activity demonstrates that
the carrier protein subunits of the invention will bind somatomedin-like polypeptides
in vivo, and provide substantially the transport and regulatory activity of the native carrier
protein. When this description refers to the capability of the carrier protein subunits
to bind somatomedin-like polypeptides, it is referring to this ability to bind such
polypeptides
in vitro or
in vivo. The carrier protein subunits have no substantial binding activity for insulin.
[0042] The carrier protein subunits of the invention each constitute a single polypeptide
chain. The carrier protein subunits of the invention have an N-terminal amino acid
molecule of the formula:

wherein R is cysteine or half-cystine. Half-cystine refers to an amino acid bound
to another half-cystine amino acid in the same polypeptide chain by a disulfide bond.
Because the carrier protein may be polymorphic, the amino acid molecule of the carrier
protein subunits may also vary depending on the polymorphic character of the carrier
protein. For example, the carrier protein subunits may contain a glycine ("Gly") residue
in place of the alanine ("Ala") at position 5 from the N-terminal. Similarly, the
Glu at position 14 from the N-terminal may sometimes be replaced in part by Phe.
[0043] The carrier protein subunits of the invention have a range of molecular weights.
The molecular weights of the carrier protein subunits referred to in this description
are those determined by SDS-PAGE gel electrophoresis against proteins of known weight
conducted in the presence of a suitable reducing agent such as β-mercaptoethanol "BME."
The known protein standards were 200,000 (myosin (H-chain)), 97,400 (phosphorylase
b), 66,200 (bovine serum albumin) 43,000 (ovalbumin), 25,700 (α chymotrypsinogen),
18,400 (β-lactoglobulin and 14,300 (lysozyme). Carrier protein subunits having molecular
weights of about 15,000, 21,000, 26,000 and 30,000 daltons have been isolated and
identified. The carrier protein subunits may differ in molecular weight because they
were present in the carrier protein as polypeptides of that size or because of enzymatic
digestion or break-down from other causes. Whatever the source of these differences,
the carrier protein subunits of the invention have a molecular weight of about 30,000
or less. The carrier protein subunits of the invention preferably have a molecular
weight of about 15,000 to and including about 30,000 daltons.
[0044] The carrier protein subunits of the invention are glycoproteins, as shown by their
positive reaction to the periodic acid Schiff reagent and ability to bind concanavalin
A cross-linked to agarose (Con-A Sepharose, Pharmacia). Binding to Con-A Sepharose
is specific for glycoproteins containing glucose and mannose residues. Specific residues
include α-D-mannopyranosyl and α-D-glucopyranosyl residues. Therefore, the carrier
protein subunits are substantially glycosylated.
[0045] The invention also provides essentially pure carrier protein subunits having SM binding
activity. The carrier protein subunits of the invention are essentially free of other
proteins, peptides, nucleotides, polysaccharides, lipids and salts. By virtue of the
invention, it is possible to obtain those subunits in sufficient purity for use in
human and animal therapeutic agents, as animal growth promotion agents, in human
and other animal diagnostic reagents, and in human and other animal research applications.
[0046] The invention also provides therapeutic compositions comprising an effective amount
of at least one carrier protein subunit capable of binding somatomedin-like polypeptides,
or pharmacologically acceptable salts thereof, and a pharamacologically acceptable
carrier. The carrier protein subunit of such therapeutic compositions may be at least
one essentially pure carrier protein subunit. Compositions of carrier protein subunits
of the invention have many therapeutic uses involving the important biological properties
of SMs. Compositions comprising the human carrier protein subunits may be useful
in treatment of diseases involving increased, unregulated SM-dependent growth. Thus,
the ability of the carrier protein subunits of the invention to inactivate SMs by
binding permits a new therapy of several conditions. In such therapies, it is apparent
that an effective amount of the carrier protein subunit is an amount sufficiently
in excess of the biologically active, unregulated SMs to block or inactivate the SM
activity. For example, an effective amount of carrier protein subunit may be 10 or
more times the amount of biologically active SMs on a molar basis. For example, some
cancers have been shown to produce SMs: fibrosarcomas, chondrosarcomas and hepatoma
cell lines. De Larco, J. E., et al., "A Human Fibrosarcoma Cell Line Producing Multiplication
Stimulating Activity "MSA"-related Peptides,"
Nature, 272, pp. 356-358 (1978). Breast and renal cancers produce a SM which autostimulates
the growth of the cancer. Spencer, E. M. et al., "Possible Auto-stimulation Of Human
Mammary Carcinoma Growth By Somatomedins," Annals New York Academy Sciences, 464,
pp. 448-449 (1986). Since endothelial cell and fibroblast proliferation are also stimulated
by SMs, SMs produced by breast cancers can act also as a paracrine and stimulate the
growth of the supporting stromal tissue critical to tumor survival. Bar, R. S., et
al., "Receptors For Multiplication-stimulating Activity on Human Arterial and Venous
Endothelial Cells,
J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 52, p. 814, (1981); Clemmons, D. R., et al., "Hormonal Control Of Immunoreactive
Somatomedin Production By Cultured Human Fibroblasts."
J. Clin, Invest 67, p. 10 (1981). By blocking the action of SMs, administering the human carrier
protein subunit of the invention would be expected to reduce the rate of tumor growth
and additionally render the malignant cells more sensitive to other drugs.
[0047] Carrier protein subunit therapy could also help prevent blindness secondary to diabetic
proliferative retinopathy. Spencer and others have shown that SM-C seems to be one
of the factors stimulating endothelial and fibroblast proliferation in diabetic retinopathy.
Lorenzi, M., Spencer, E. M. et al., "Improved Diabetic Control, Growth Factors and
Rapid Progression Of Retinopathy,"
New England Journal of Medicine, 308, p. 160, (1983); Ashton, I. K., et al., "Plasma somatomedin in diabetics with
retinopathy and joint contractures" in
Insulin-Like Growth Factors/Somatomedins., ed. Spencer, E. M. (Walter de Gruyter). The ability of the carrier protein subunit
to block this adverse effect of SM-C (and possible also IGF-II) could be a useful
new therapy.
[0048] The carrier protein subunits of the invention are also useful to produce antibodies.
The invention will enable pure carrier protein subunits to be used as the antigen
to produce both polyclonal antibodies with high titers, high affinities or blocking
properties, and monoclonal antibodies that are not now available. These antibodies
could be used for immunoassays to make specific measurements, for blocking carrier
protein activity, affinity chromatography and immunohistochemistry.
[0049] The carrier protein subunits can also be used to develop the first procedure to measure
the free level of SMs in body fluids. This method would improve current methods that
can only measure total SMs because the free level is really what determines their
biological activity. The carrier protein subunit antibody would be used to separate
the SM-carrier protein complex from the free SMs in fluids. The free SMs could then
be measured by, for example, RIA.
[0050] This invention also provides a composition comprising at least one carrier protein
subunit substantially complexed with at least one somatomedin-like polypeptide. Such
a composition would have a variety of therapeutic applications. SMs possess biological
activity which make them potentially useful in many therapeutic applications. However,
to maintain the required steady level of SMs in plasma, multiple daily injections
would have to be given because the half-life of SMs may be less than one hour in the
free condition. This obstacle cannot be overcome by administering a larger dosage
because (a) SMs are potent mitogens for subcutaneous, muscular, and vascular tissues
(fibro blasts, endothelial cells, muscle cells, adipocytes, and endothelial cells)
and could produce local tissue proliferation, (b) large amounts of free SMs would
cause hypoglycemia, and (c) the excessive amount of SMs required to maintain a steady
plasma level would not be cost effective.
[0051] SM could be delivered to target tissues in a safe, effective physiologic manner and
their half-life significantly prolonged by complexing them to the carrier protein
subunits of the invention. The SM in a SM-carrier protein subunit complex would not
be mitogenic at injection sites or hypoglycemic. This complex could be formulated
to provide controlled, long-term absorption. After transport to target tissues, dissociation
would release SM. Thus, therapy would mimic the physiologic delivery system. Successful
therapeutic and animal husbandry use of SM-C, IGF-II and other somatomedin-like polypeptides
are permitted by a composition of at least one human somatomedin-like polypeptide
and at least one carrier protein subunit. Compositions comprising one or more carrier
protein subunit and one or more SMs would also be useful for treatment of diseases
such as postmenopausal osteoporosis, other forms of osteoporosis, and human GH deficiency,
as well as for healing wounds and increasing animal growth. Such composition would
be used to deliver SM to bony tissues and stimulate the growth of bone. Dissociation
of the SM from the carrier protein subunit-SM complex should stimulate osteoblasts
to increase bone formation in postmenopausal osteoporosis, invade the porous matrix
of a prosthetic joint thereby stabilizing the prosthesis, and to promote healing of
un-united fractures.
[0052] Therapeutic compositions comprising an effective amount of at least one carrier protein
subunit capable of binding somatomodin-like polypeptides, or pharmacologically acceptable
salts thereof, and a pharmacologically acceptable carrier and therapeutic processes
using such compositions may also be useful in treating injuries or diseases in which
the natural healing mechanism or response involves the presence of regulated levels
of biologically active somatomedins. For example, such compositions may be useful
in wound healing, where the natural physiological response involves the presence of
endogenous SMs at the site of the wound. An effective amount of carrier protein subunit
is an amount sufficient to prolong the half-life of the endogenous biologically active
somatomedins.
[0053] Compositions of at least one carrier protein subunit and SM-C can be used as an effective
biodegradable growth-enhancer in animal husbandry. Currently antibiotics and steroids
are commercially important animal growth promoters. Because there are serious health
concerns with both classes, new agents are being sought, especially biodegradable
ones. GH has been investigated. However, the SM-C-carrier protein subunit complex
may be much more effective, because SM-C is the direct mediator of the growth promoting
effect of GH. SM-C is neither diabetogenic nor lipolytic. For the same reasons applied
to postmenopausal osteoporosis, the SM-C would have to be administered in composition
with the carrier protein subunit.
[0054] For all of these reasons, there have been many attempts to determine the protein
structure needed for carrier protein-like activity. None have identified and isolated
the carrier protein subunits of this invention or isolated them in pure form.
[0055] Another aspect of the invention is a process for producing the human carrier protein
subunits from human plasma comprising (a) chromatographing the portions of Cohn fraction
IV-1 that are soluble in an aqueous solution of pH of about 4.5 to 7.5 on a sulfopropyl
derivative of a cross-linked dextran adsorbent by sequentially eluting with aqueous
solutions of increasing pH; (b) chromatographing an acidic solution of pH less than
about 4.0 of the fractions from step (a) that contain somatomedin binding activity
on the same adsorbent as step (a) and collecting the pass-through fraction, or chromatographing
the fractions from step (a) on a phenyl derivative of agarose by adsorption from a
neutral solution of about 10% ammonium sulfate and eluting with about 0.5 M sodium
thiocyanate solution at about neutral pH; (c) chromatographing the fraction from step
(b) containing somatomedin binding activity by gel filtration and eluting with an
acidic aqueous solution; (d) chromatographing the fraction from step (c) containing
somatomedin binding activity on a solid support cross-linked to substantially pure
somatomedin-C by adsorbing at about neutral pH and eluting with an acidic aqueous
solution; and (e) chromatographing the fraction from step (d) containing somatomedin
binding activity by reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography.
Recombinant DNA And Carrier Protein-Like Polypeptides
[0056] The present invention also involves locating, identifying, and isolating DNA molecules
that code for carrier protein-like polypeptides, recombinant DNA molecules, vectors,
hosts and methods for the use of those molecules, vectors and hosts in the production
of carrier protein-like polypeptides, that is, polypeptides displaying a somatomedin
regulating activity of a carrier protein and being capable of binding somatomedin-like
polypeptides. By virtue of this invention, it is possible to obtain carrier protein-like
polypeptides for use in therapeutic and diagnostic compositions and methods. This
invention allows the production of these polypeptides in amounts and by methods not
available previously. This invention also involves producing these polypeptides essentially,
and more preferably completely, free of other polypeptides naturally present in human
plasma.
[0057] As will be appreciated from the disclosure, the DNA molecules and recombinant DNA
molecules of the invention contain genes that are capable of directing the expression,
in an appropriate host, of carrier protein-like polypeptides. Replication of these
DNA molecules and recombinant DNA molecules in appropriate hosts also permits the
production in large quantities of genes coding for these polypeptides. The molecular
structure and properties of these polypeptides and genes may thus be readily determined.
The polypeptides and molecules are useful, either as produced in the host or after
appropriate modification, in compositions and methods for improving the production
of these products themselves and for use in therapeutic and diagnostic compositions
and methods.
[0058] A basic aspect of this invention is the provision of a DNA molecule comprising a
gene which codes for a carrier protein-like polypeptide, namely one displaying a
somatomedin regulating activity of the carrier protein and being capable of binding
somatomedin-like polypeptides. Such a DNA molecule has been isolated in the sense
that it is not the entire human genome. Such a DNA molecule is preferably free of
introns. Such a DNA molecule is also preferably essentially free of genes which code
for any other polypeptide coded for by the human genome. Preferably, such a gene codes
for a polypeptide having a molecular weight of about 40,000-50,000 daltons or less,
if molecular weight is measured in a form accompanied by natural glycosylation. Such
a gene may code for a polypeptide displaying a somatomedin regulating activity of
the carrier protein, and more preferably, a somatomedin-C regulating activity of the
carrier protein. Such a gene may also code for a carrier protein-like polypeptide
that is a carrier protein subunit capable of binding somatomedin-like polypeptides,
and more preferably a carrier protein subunit capable of binding somatomedin-C.
[0059] The invention also provides a process for obtaining a DNA molecule, comprising preparing
cDNA molecules from mRNA found in cells or tissues that produce the carrier protein,
determining which of the cDNA molecules hybridize to one or more labelled polynucleotide
probes based on the DNA sequence of Figure 4, analyzing the cDNA molecules that hybridized,
and obtaining a DNA molecule having a gene which codes for a carrier protein-like
polypeptide. In that process, a DNA molecule having the gene may be obtained by ligating
one or more cDNA molecules that hybridized with other cDNA molecules, synthetic DNA
molecules, or recombinant DNA molecules. The cDNA molecule which hybridizes to said
probe may be a cDNA molecule selected from the group consisting of a human liver gene
library, a human fibroblast gene library, a human placenta library, and a human epithelial
library. In that process, the labelled polynucleotide probe may have the DNA sequence
shown in Figure 2a. The invention also includes a DNA molecule made by that process,
and a DNA molecule which encodes a carrier protein-like polypeptide coded for by a
DNA molecule obtainable by that process.
[0060] The invention also provides an oligonucleotide probe having all or a portion of the
DNA sequence of any one of the DNA molecules LCP, LCP 0.70, LCP 0.77, LCP 2.3, LCP
2.5, FCP 1.8 and FCP 2.5, which selectively hybridizes to a DNA molecule encoding
a carrier protein-like polypeptide.
[0061] In addition, a DNA molecule of the invention may be selected from the group consisting
of the DNA molecule LCP 0.70, LCP 0.77, LCP 2.3, LCP 2.5, FCP 1.8 and FCP 2.5, DNA
molecules which hybridize to any of the DNA molecules LCP 0.70, LCP 0.77, LCP 2.3,
LCP 2.5, FCP 1.8 and FCP 2.5, and which code for a carrier protein-like polypeptide,
and DNA molecules which code for a polypeptide coded for by any of the foregoing DNA
molecules. A preferred DNA molecule comprises a DNA molecule which is the carrier
protein-related portion of LCP 2.3. Another recombinant DNA molecule comprises a DNA
molecule which is the carrier protein-related portion of LCP 2.3, and DNA molecules
which code for a polypeptide coded for by said portions of LCP 2.3.
[0062] Furthermore, a DNA molecule of the invention may comprise a gene which codes for
a polypeptide having the sequence of amino acids -1 to 290 of Figure 4, amino acids
1 to 290 of Figure 4, or amino acids 27 to 290 of Figure 4. A DNA molecule may also
comprise a gene which codes for a polypeptide having the sequence of amino acids 27
to 290 of Figure 4 and having a methionine residue preceding amino acid 27.
[0063] A DNA molecule may also comprise a gene which codes for a polypeptide having the
sequence of amino acids 27 to 290 and having a sequence of amino acid residues preceding
amino acid 27 that constitute a secretion, signal or other precursor sequence recognized
by a host.
[0064] These DNA molecules may be used to construct a recombinant DNA molecule in which
such DNA molecules are operatively linked to an expression control sequence. Preferably,
such a recombinant DNA molecule constitutes a vector or vehicle. The invention provides
a method for producing a vector comprising introducing into a vector such a DNA molecule.
That method may comprise the additional step of introducing into said vector an expression
control sequence, so as to control and to regulate the expression of that DNA molecule.
The expression control sequence may be a
lac system, a
trp system, a
tac system, a
trc system, a T7 system, major operator and promoter regions of phage λ, the control
region of fd coat protein, the control sequences of SV-40, the actin system, the metallothionein
system, the LTR (promoter containing long terminal repeat of retrovirus) system, and
other sequences which control the expression of genes or prokaryotic or eukaryotic
cells and their viruses and combinations thereof.
[0065] The recombinant DNA molecules and vectors of this invention permit the production
of carrier protein-like polypeptides in hosts. The invention also includes a host
transformed with at least one of those recombinant DNA molecules or vectors. A transformed
host may be strains of
E. coli,
Pseudomonas,
Bacillus subtilis,
Bacillus stearothermophilus, other bacteria, yeast, fungi, animal, insect or plant hosts and human tissue cells.
[0066] The invention provides a method for producing a carrier protein-like polypeptide,
comprising the steps of transforming an appropriate host with such a recombinant DNA
molecule or vector, and culturing said host to make such a polypeptide. Preferably,
the method includes the additional step of collecting said polypeptide. In this method,
the host may be strains of
E. coli,
Pseudomonas,
Bacillus subtilis,
Bacillus stearothermophilus, other bacteria, yeasts, fungi, animal, insect or plant hosts, and human tissue cells.
The method for producing such a polypeptide may also comprise the steps of culturing
a host transformed by such a recombinant DNA molecule or vector.
[0067] The invention also provides a polypeptide that is coded for on expression by a recombinant
DNA molecule or vector described above.
[0068] The invention also provides an essentially pure carrier protein-like polypeptide
other than a carrier protein subunit capable of binding somatomedin-like polypeptides.
Such an essentially pure polypeptide is preferably essentially free of substances
naturally present in human serum. Such a polypeptide may be a mature carrier protein-like
polypeptide. Such a mature polypeptide is one in which the amino acid residues constituting
a secretion, signal or other precursor sequence are deleted.
[0069] The invention provides an essentially pure polypeptide having the sequence of amino
acids -1 to 290 of Figure 4.
[0070] It also provides an essentially pure polypeptide having the sequence of amino acids
1 to 290 of Figure 4. The invention includes a polypeptide having the sequence of
amino acids 27 to 290 and having a methionine residue preceding amino acid 27. It
further provides an essentially pure polypeptide having the sequence of amino acids
27 to 290 of Figure 4.
[0071] The invention includes polypeptides having the sequence 27 to 290 in which one or
more amino acid residues may have been added, deleted or substituted, so long as the
polypeptide remains a carrier protein-like polypeptide.
[0072] The invention includes a polypeptide having the sequence of amino acids -1 to 290
of Figure 4, and polypeptides that have a portion of that sequence and have a somatomedin
regulating activity of the carrier protein and are capable of binding somatomedin-like
polypeptides.
[0073] The invention also provides a carrier protein-like polypeptide lacking the natural
glycosylation of the carrier protein.
[0074] The invention is also a therapeutic composition for inhibiting the effect of somatomedin-C
in acromegaly, for inhibiting the growth of retinal blood vessels and fibrous tissues
in diabetic retinopathy, for inhibiting growth of tall children, for inhibiting the
growth of keloid scars, for inhibiting the growth of tissue in the orbit of the eyes
in malignant exophthalmos or for stimulating the healing of human or animal wounds,
comprising an effective amount of at least one such carrier protein-like polypeptide
described above, or a pharmacologically-acceptable salt thereof, and a pharmacologically-acceptable
carrier. The invention includes a method for inhibiting the growth of somatomedin-dependent
cancers, for inhibiting the effect of somatomedin-C in acromegaly, for inhibiting
the growth of retinal blood vessels and fibrous tissues in diabetic retinopathy, for
inhibiting growth of tall children, for inhibiting the growth of keloid scars, for
inhibiting the growth of tissue in the orbit of the eyes in malignant exophthalmos
or for stimulating the healing of human or animal wounds, comprising administering
an effective amount of such a composition.
[0075] The invention is also embodied in a composition having at least one such carrier
protein-like polypeptide described above substantially complexed with at least one
somatomedin-like polypeptide. Such compositions may be used in a therapeutic composition
for treating osteoporosis in humans, for stimulating the growth of bone, for stimulating
animal growth, for stimulating the healing of human and animal wounds, or for stimulating
the growth of patients with growth hormone deficiency, comprising an effective amount
of such a composition. Such compositions may also be used in a method for treating
such conditions comprising administering an effective amount of such a composition.
[0076] The invention provides a recombinant DNA molecule having a DNA molecule including
a gene which codes for such a carrier protein-like polypeptide linked to an expression
control sequence and having a DNA molecule including a gene which codes for a somatomedin-like
polypeptide operatively linked to an expression control sequence. A host may be transformed
with at least one such recombinant DNA molecule to permit it to produce both types
of polypeptides.
[0077] A single vector may also be constructed to contain a DNA molecule which codes for
at least one carrier protein-like polypeptide described above and a DNA molecule whch
codes for a somatomedin-like polypeptide each operatively linked to an expression
control sequence. A host may be transformed with such a vector. A method for producing
a composition comprising a complex of a carrier protein-like polypeptide and a somatomedin-like
polypeptide involves transforming an appropriate host with such a vector and culturing
said host to make said polypeptides. The method could include the additional step
of collecting the polypeptides. That method could comprise simply culturing a host
transformed with such a vector. A method for producing such a composition also involves
transforming an appropriate host with at least one recombinant DNA molecule or vector
having a DNA molecule which codes for a carrier protein-like polypeptide as described
above, co-transforming such host with at least one recombinant DNA molecule or vector
having a DNA molecule which codes for a somatomedin-like polypeptide, and culturing
such host to produce both types of polypeptides. The invention also encompasses hosts
transformed with at least one of each such type of recombinant DNA molecule or vector.
[0078] Finally, monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies against such polypeptides may be produced.
The polypeptides of the invention could also be used in a method for measuring the
level of free somatomedins in human fluids comprising separating somatomedins complexed
with such polypeptides from unbound somatomedins.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0079]
Figure 1 shows the sequence of the N-terminal 42 amino acid residues of a human carrier
protein subunit having a molecular weight of about 15,000 daltons. In addition, the
N-terminal sequences of tryptic fragments T1, T6, T7, T1′, and T10 are shown.
Figure 2a shows the sequence of the N-terminal 57 amino acids of the subunit referred
to in Figure 1, and an oligonucleotide coding for amino acids 29-44, designed for
use as a probe. This oligonucleotide is referred to as the 48mer.
Figure 2b shows the protein and DNA sequence of the 181-bp synthetic DNA and its corresponding
protein sequence.
Figure 3a shows the size and restriction sites of the DNA inserts LCP 0.70 and LCP
0.77 that hybridized to the probe of Figure 2a, and the size and restriction sites
of a DNA insert LCP 2.3 that hybridized to probes having the DNA sequences of those
DNA inserts LCP 0.70 and LCP 0.77.
Figure 3b displays the strategy for sequencing LCP 2.3.
Figure 4 displays the nucleotide sequence of the coding strand of DNA molecule LCP
2.3 and the amino acid sequence of the 291 amino acids of the polypeptide for which
it codes. "C" indicates a cysteine or half-cystine residue.
Figure 5 displays the functional and partial restriction map of vector pDJ4219 which
contains a gene for a human carrier protein-like polypeptide having 264 amino acids
inserted into pKK233-2, for expression in E.coli cells.
Figure 6 displays the preparation of various recombinant DNA molecules that may be
employed in vectors for transforming appropriate hosts, which when cultured produce
carrier protein-like polypeptides.
Figure 7 displays the functional and partial restriction map of vector pDJ4212 which
contains a gene for a human carrier protein-like polypeptide having the first 120
amino acids of mature carrier protein that has been inserted into pSVL derivative
pDJ4210, for expression in COS cells.
Figure 8 displays the functional and partial restriction map of vector pKG4403 which
contains a gene for a human carrier protein-like polypeptide having 264 amino acids
inserted into pKG3226, for expression in CHO cells.
Figure 9 shows the effect of 15kDa carrier protein subunit on the half-life of SM-C
in circulation.
Assay for Somatomedin Binding Activity
[0080] The somatomedin binding activity is measured by a protein binding assay employing
a radiolabeled ¹²⁵I-SM (SM-C or IGF-II) as the ligand. The amount of ¹²⁵I-SM bound
is compared to that of a standard preparation.
[0081] The standard was prepared by gel filtration of a pool of human serum from 10 normal
donors. The serum, 35 ml, was added to 35 ml of 4 N acetic acid. After clarification,
the sample was chromatographed on Sephadex G-50 (5 x 100 cm) (fractionation range
1,500 to 30,000) equilibrated with 1 M acetic acid at a flow rate of 80 ml/hr. All
fractions were assayed for somatomedin binding activity using ¹²⁵I-SM-C. The binding
activity appeared from K
d 0 - 04. These fractions wer lyophilized, redissolved in 1 M acetic acid and rechromatographed
to remove all traces of bound SMs. The final powder was redissolved in 35 ml of 0.1
M phosphate buffer pH 7.0, aliquoted in 100 ul amounts, and stored at -26°C. For
each binding assay, a tube of this material was used as a reference that has arbitrarily
been assigned a value of 1.0 U/ml.
[0082] The assay method was that described by Zapf et al., ("Serum Levels of the Insulin-like
Growth Factor (SM) and its Carrier,"
Acta Endocrinol. 95, p. 505-517, (1980)). For samples where the carrier protein subunit was still
complexed to SMs, the two were separated by Sephadex G-50 chromatography (0.9 x 110
cm) in 1 M acetic acid. The binding activity peak (K
d.1 - 0.4) was then lyophilized, reconstituted in assay buffer and tested. For samples
that did not contain bound SMs, the samples were either dialyzed against assay buffer
and tested directly or, if the concentration of binding activity was low, dialyzed
vs 0.1 M acetic acid, lyophi lized and dissolved in a smaller volume of assay buffer.
The assay buffer was 0.1 M sodium phosphate pH 7.0 containing 0.2% human or bovine
serum albumin which had been previously tested to ensure absence of competing activity.
SM-C or IGF-II were iodinated by the method of Spencer. Grecu, E. O., E. M. Spencer,
et al., "Serum Somatomedin Response to Human Growth Hormone Infusion in Patients with
Diabetes Mellitus; Correlation with the Degree of Control of Diabetes," Am. J. Med.
Sci., 287, pp. 7-10 (1984). Serial dilutions (2-or 4-fold) of samples and standard
were assayed in triplicate. Assay tubes consisted to 100 ul of ¹²⁵I-SM, 20,000 cpm,
and 200 ul of the sample. The assay was carried out at 4°C for 16 h although satisfactory
results could be obtained with a 2 h incubation at room temperature. The bound ¹²⁵I-SM
was separated from the free by charcoal extraction. An ice cold solution, 0.8 ml,
of 2% activated charcoal with 1% human (or bovine) albumin in 0.1 M phosphate buffer
pH 7.0 was added and the tubes vortexed for 15 minutes at 4°C. After centrifugation,
the supernatant was counted. The cpm bound were plotted against the log of the dose
and the potency of the unknown related to that of the standard assigned a value of
1.0 U/ml. The specificity of binding was determined by incubating the sample with
a large excess of an unlabeled SM.
Other Somatomedin Binding Assays
[0083] Dot-blot and Western assays may also be used to determine the existence of polypeptides
with somatomedin binding activity.
Dot Blot "Binding In Wells" Format
[0084] The nitrocellulose membrane and 3-MM filter paper are first placed in water and subsequently
soaked in PBS (10 mM NaPO₄, pH 7.2, 0.15 M NaCl) for 20-30 minutes. The filter paper
and membrane are placed on the dot-blot apparatus, with the membrane on top of the
filter paper. The apparatus is assembled and clamped according to manufacturer's instructions
(Bio-Rad). The dot-blot apparatus contains 96 wells which makes it very convenient
to process many samples simultaneously. Wells are rinsed with 200 ul PBS. Carrier
protein-like polypeptides are diluted in PBS to the appropriate concentrations to
make total volumes of 50 ul/well. Control and blank wells contain BSA (bovine serum
albumin) or no protein, respectively. Samples are applied to wells and are allowed
to flow through the membrane by gravity. Binding of the protein to the membrane is
completed within 30-60 minutes. The membrane is blocked with 200 ul/well 1% BSA in
PBS, which is allowed to flow by gravity for 30 minutes, then is "pulled" by a vacuum
through the membrane. Wells are washed three times with 100 ul TBS (50 mM Tris-HCl,
pH 7.5, 0.15 M NaCl), 0.1% Tween 20. ¹²⁵I-SM-C (20,000-200,000 cpm) is added in 50
ul PBS per well. The apparatus is tightly covered with Parafilm and left at 4′ for
1.5-2 hours. This step constitutes the binding of SM-C to carrier protein-like polypeptides.
The apparatus is disassembled and the membrane washed in large volumes of TBS; TBS,
0.1% Tween 20; and TBS; each wash is 15 minutes at 4°C with gentle shaking. The membrane
is air dried and exposed to Kodak X-Omat AR film with intensifying screens at -70°C
for 1-6 hours.
Dot Blot "Binding in Bag" Format
[0085] Pretreatment of membrane, dot-blot apparatus assembly, and binding of protein to
membrane is carried out as described above. Following binding of protein to membrane,
the dot-blot apparatus is disassembled, and the membrane is air dried. The membrane
is placed in a dish and washed at 4′ with gentle shaking in the following solutions:
TBS plus 3% NP40, for 30 minutes; TBS plus 1% BSA, for 1 hour; TBS plus 0.1% Tween
20, for 10 minutes. The membrane is placed in a bag with 6-10 ml binding solution
(TBS, 1% BSA, 0.1% Tween 20). ¹²⁵I-SM-C (2-20 million cpm) is added and binding proceeds
at 4°C for 12 hours or overnight, with gentle shaking. This step constitutes the
binding of SM-C to carrier protein-like polypeptides. The membrane is washed two
times in large volumes of TBS, 0.1% Tween 20 and two times in TBS alone. Each wash
is done for 15 minutes at 4°C, with gentle shaking. The membrane is air dried and
exposed to Kodak X-Omat AR film with intensifying screens at -70°C for 5-16 hours.
Western
[0086] Protein samples containing carrier protein-like polypeptides are loaded and run on
polyacrylamide-SDS gels. Normally 12% gels are run which will allow for good separation
of proteins between 10,000 and 70,000 daltons. Separation is accomplished by electrophoresis.
Proteins within the gel are then blotted onto a nitrocellulose membrane, and the
resultant membrane is air dried 5 minutes at 37°C. The membrane, containing the bound
proteins, is rinsed with TBS plus 3% NP40 at 4°C for 30 minutes. The membrane's nonspecific
sites are blocked with 1% BSA in TBS at 4°C for 2 hours. The membrane is rinsed with
TBS plus 0.1% Tween 20 at 4°C for 10 minutes. The membrane is probed with ¹²⁵I-SM-C
by placing the membrane in a bag with 6-10 ml TBS, 1% BSA, 0.1% Tween 20 plus 500,000
cpm ¹²⁵I-SM-C. The membrane is gently shaken overnight at 4°C to allow for binding
between SM-C and carrier protein-like polypeptides immobilized on the membrane. The
membrane is subjected to the following washes at 4°C: TBS plus 0.1% Tween 20, twice,
for 15 minutes each; TBS, three times, for 15 minutes each. The membrane is air dried
and exposed to Kodak X-Omat AR film with intensifying screens at -70°C for 5-16 hours.
Process For Producing Carrier Protein Subunits From Plasma
[0087] The procedure for producing the carrier protein subunits began with Cohn fraction
IV-1. This is a human plasma fraction that contains about 10% of the plasma proteins
and 40% of the original plasma carrier protein activity. It is a green-yellow paste,
approximately 35% solids, much of which are denatured insoluble proteins and glycoproteins.
Each kilogram of this paste contains approximately 10 mg of carrier protein.
[0088] All assay buffers described below contained the following enzyme inhibitors, unless
otherwise noted: 1 millimolar ("mM") phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride ("PMSF"), 1 mM
N-ethylmaleimide ("NEM"), and 1 mM ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid ("EDTA"). Enzyme
inhibitors were essential because either the carrier protein has inherent protease
activity or at least one other plasma protease was co-purified through the affinity
chromatography step.
Example 1
(a) Ion Exchange Chromatography
[0089] Fraction IV-1 was handled in 1 kg batches. One kg of fraction IV-1 was added to 10
liters of 40 mM ammonium acetate-acetic acid solution pH 5.65 containing enzyme inhibitors
and stirred overnight at 4°C. The suspension was centrifuged and the supernatant was
concentrated to about 1 liter by ultrafiltration with a 10,000 MW semipermeable membrane.
[0090] The entire concentrate was applied to a 10 x 25 cm column at 4°C of a sulfopropyl
derivative of cross-linked dextran (SP-Sephadex, Pharmacia) previously equilibrated
with 40 mM ammonium acetate-acetic acid buffer at pH 5.65. The column was washed with
5 liters of the same buffer, followed by 10 liters of 50 mM ammonium acetate pH 6.8,
and finally 2 liters of 50 mM ammonium acetate-ammonia at pH 9.6. The pH 9.6 eluate
was col lected and lyophilized. The recovery of SM binding activity in the lyophilized
material determined by the binding assay was 20%. This constituted about a 10 fold
purification.
(b) Hydrophobic Interaction Chromatography
[0091] The lyophilized product with SM binding activity was dissolved in a buffer containing
10% ammonium sulfate and 50 mM tris-(hydroxymethyl) aminomethane ("Tris")-hydrochloride
("Tris-HCl") pH 7.5, dialyzed against the same buffer, and applied to a phenyl agarose
column (Phenyl-Sepharose, Pharmacia). The column was eluted first with 1 liter of
the same buffer, then with 2 liters of 50 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5 containing 0.5 M sodium
thiocyanate ("NaSCN") and finally with 2 liters of 50 mM Tris, pH 9.0. The eluted
fractions were collected and tested for UV absorption at 280 nM and for SM-binding
activity in the binding assay. The SM binding activity appeared in the NaSCN fractions.
These were lyophilized and then dialyzed against distilled water. A significant amount
of precipitate appeared which was separated from the supernatant. The step resulted
in a 20-fold purification with 70% recovery.
(c) Gel Filtration
[0092] The supernatant was lyophilized, dissolved in 0.5 M acetic acid and chromatographed
on a 2 x 100 column of a cross-linked dextran gel (Sephadex G-150, Pharmacia) having
a fractionation range of 5,000 - 230,000. Fractions containing SM binding activity
were collected. The recovery of SM binding activity was 80-90% by binding assay and
the fold purification was 5.
(d) Affinity Chromatography
[0093] A SM-C affinity column was first made by coupling SM-C previously purified from
human plasma (Spencer et al., in
Insulin-Like Growth Factors/Somatomedins, ed. Spencer, E. M., Walter de Gruyter 1983), p. 81) to a hydroxysuccinimidyl derivative
of agarose (Affi-Gel 15, BioRad) at pH 8.0 and 25° for 2 hours. The combined carrier
protein fractions from the previous step were dialyzed against 0.1 M sodium phosphate
pH 7.0, then applied to the SM-C affinity column. After a 15 ml wash with the same
buffer, the SM binding activity was eluted with 10 ml of 0.5 M acetic acid and lyophilized.
[0094] The SM binding activity was next chromatographed on a cross-linked dextran gel (Sephadex
G-100, Pharmacia) having a fractionation range from 4,000 - 90,000 and equilibrated
with 0.5 M acetic acid. The fractions containing activity, as shown by the SM binding
assay, were lyophilized.
(e) High Performance Liquid Chromatography("HPLC")
[0095] The lyophilized material was chromatographed by HPLC on a butylsilane (Vydac C₄ RP
(reverse phase)) column. The SM binding activity was eluted by a 0-60% linear gradient
of acetonitrile in 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid ("TFA"). A sharp peak of SM-C binding
activity occurred at 39% acetonitrile and was collected. The SM binding activity in
this peak appeared as a single band on 12.5% sodium dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide
gel electrophoresis ("SDS-PAGE") upon staining with a silver stain (BioRad).
[0096] The carrier protein subunit isolated had a molecular weight of approximately 26 kDa
as shown by SDS-PAGE in the presence of β-mercaptoethanol. The overall yield of the
carrier protein subunit was 4% of the original binding activity.
[0097] The N-terminal amino acid molecule of this carrier protein subunit was determined
by the method of Hunkapillar and Hood (Methods in Enzymology, 91, p. 486, (1983)),
using an automated gas phase sequenator (Beckman 6300) to be:
Gly-Ala-Ser-Ser-Ala-Gly-Leu-Gly-Pro-Val-Val-Arg-R-Glu-Pro-R-Asp-Ala-Arg-Ala-Leu-Ala-,
with R indicating cysteine or half-cystine.
This carrier protein subunit bound ¹²⁵I-SM-C and was shown to be glycosylated by periodic
acid Schiff ("PAS") staining.
Example 2
(a) Ion Exchange Chromatography
[0098] One kg of Cohn fraction IV-1 was extracted with 4 liters of 40 mM ammonium acetate-acetic
acid buffer pH 5.65 with inhibitors (1 mM EDTA. 1 mM NEM, 0.1 mM PMSF and 1 mg/l aprotinin)
overnight at 4°C. The protein solution was spun at 9,000 x g for 30 minutes to separate
precipitate from supernatant. The precipitate was reextracted with 4 liters of the
above buffer for 4 hours. Supernatants from both extractions were combined.
[0099] The supernatants were applied to a SP-Sephadex column (2000 ml resin) which had been
equilibrated with the above buffer at 4°C. After application, the column was washed
with the same buffer until the A₂₈₀ dropped below 1.0. The column was further washed
with 50 mM ammonium acetate buffer, pH 6.8 with inhibitors until the A₂₈₀ was below
1.0. Then the SM binding activity was eluted with 60 mM ammonium acetate-ammonia buffer,
pH 9.6 with inhibitors. Finally, the column was cleaned with 60 mM ammonium acetate-ammonia,
pH 9.6 with 1.0 M NaCl.
[0100] The extract from 1 kg Cohn fraction IV-1 gave about 5,000 units of SM-binding activity.
In the pH 9.6 fractions about 7.5% of the activity was recovered, as determined by
the binding assay. The weight of the fraction was approximately 5.5 g.
(b) Ion Exchange Chromatography
[0101] The pH 9.6 fraction from the previous column was dissolved in 130 ml of a 1 M acetic
acid solution containing inhibitors (0.1 mM EDTA, PMSF, NEM and 1 mg/l aprotinin).
The solution was dialyzed at 4°C overnight against the same buffer solution and applied
to a 5 x 40 cm SP-Sephadex column, which had been previously equilibrated with the
same buffer. The column was washed until A₂₈₀ was approximately 0.2, then eluted with
60 mM ammonium acetate-ammonia, pH 9.6, with inhibitors. The SM binding activity was
in the pass-through fraction which was dialyzed at 4°C against distilled water overnight
to precipitate some denatured proteins. After dialysis, the precipitate was removed
by centrifugation at 9,000 x g for 30 minutes and the supernatant freezed-dried.
SM binding activity was recovered quantitatively in the soluble pass-through fraction,
while SM-C was recovered in the pH 9.6 fraction.
(c) Gel Filtration
[0102] An aliquot of the fraction (0.33 g) containing SM binding activity was then dissolved
in a minimal amount of 0.5 M acetic acid solution and applied to a 2.5 x 100 cm Sephadex
G-100 column, which had been equilibrated under the same conditions. The column was
eluted with 0.5 M acetic acid. The A₂₈₀ and SM binding activities of 5 ml fractions
were measured. Those fractions exhibiting activity were pooled together and lyophilized.
The purification was at this step five fold and the SM binding activity was recovered
quantitatively. Several runs were required to process all the material.
(d) Affinity Chromatography
[0103] Eighty mg of fractions containing binding activity from the previous step were dissolved
in 40 ml of 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.0, with inhibitors and dialyzed against the
same buffer for about 4 hrs. After dialysis, the solution was mixed with 3 ml SM-C-affinity
column resin. The mixture was agitated gently at 4°C overnight to increase the binding.
The resin was separated from the protein solution by passage through a column. The
column was first washed with 50 ml of the phosphate buffer then eluted with 0.5 M
acetic acid. The SM binding activity (about 10 units) was dried in a vacuum centrifuge
(Speed-Vac Concentrator, Savant Instruments).
(e) HPLC
[0104] The 10 units of recovered SM binding activity were dissolved in 1 ml 0.1% TFA solution.
After injecting the sample onto a Vydak C4 RP column, the column was eluted with
a 0-60% acetonitrile gradient in 60 minutes. The carrier protein peak appeared at
approximately 39% acetonitrile, which was collected and lyophilized. The SM binding
activity was recovered quantitatively and was approximately 60 micrograms.
[0105] The SM binding activity appeared after silver staining as a single band on SDS-PAGE,
with a molecular weight of about 15 kDa. The overall yield of this example was approximately
3%.
[0106] The specific activity of the pure carrier protein subunit was determined to be 4
ug/unit where 1 unit is the amount in 1 ml of a standard plasma prepared from a pool
of 10 normal men and women, as described above.
[0107] For N-terminal molecule determination, the SM binding activity was denatured and
reduced in 4 M guanidine-HCl, 0.5 M Tris-HCl, pH 8.6 and 0.7% β-mercaptoethanol
overnight. Iodoacetamide was added to the solution. The reaction was carried out in
the dark for one hour and stopped by adding TFA to 0.1%. The reaction mixture was
injected onto the HPLC column and the carboxyamidomethylated carrier protein subunit
recovered as before and used for N-terminal molecule analysis. That analysis showed
the same N-terminal amino acid molecule described in the example 1.
Example 3
[0108] The carrier protein subunit was purified as in Example 2 through the gel filtration
step (c). A 30 mg aliquot of the resulting sample containing SM binding activity was
dissolved in 0.1% TFA solution and injected into a preparative Vydak C4 RP column.
The column was eluted with a 0-60% acetonitrile gradient in 60 minutes. The SM binding
activity peak which eluted at approximately 39% acetonitrile was collected and lyophilized.
The SM binding activity was recovered quantitatively.
[0109] The sample was subsequently resuspended in a Tris-glycine buffer containing β-mercaptoethanol
and separated by SDS-PAGE (12.5% polyacrylamide). Bands corresponding to 15, 21, 26,
and 30 kDa carrier protein subunits (each of which bound labelled SM in a Western
blot) were cut from the gel, and the proteins were electroeluted into Tris-glycine
buffer. Each of the carrier protein subunits was lyophilized; recoveries were quantitative.
Example 4
[0110] Experiments designed to measure the potential of SM carrier protein subunits to potentiate
wound healing were carried out in the following manner. Each of 6 anesthetized 300
gram male Sprague-Dawley rats was implanted subcutaneously (s.c.) with Schilling-Hunt
wire mesh wound cylinders in each of the 4 quadrants on their back. Cylindrical chambers,
20 X 5.8 mm i.d. with a volume of 520 ul, were constructed out of stain less steel
wire mesh. One end was sealed with wire mesh and the other with a silastic disk. After
implantation, the typical progression of wound healing events occurred: thrombosis
of blood vessels followed sequentially by migration through the wire mesh of polymorphonuclear
leukocytes, macrophages and fibroblasts, with subsequent fibroplasia, collagen synthesis
and angiogenesis. During this process, the wound fluid that collected in the hollow
chamber could be sampled or injected with active agents (s.c. through the silastic
disk). Most of the healing was complete by 17 days after implantation; however, the
central cavity was never completely obliterated.
[0111] The 15 kDa SM carrier protein subunit was dissolved in PBS (150 mM sodium chloride,
10 mM sodium phosphate, pH 7.4), containing 0.1% bovine albumin. The wound chambers
were injected with 100 ul of this solution (containing 1.4 ug of the 15 kDa species)
every 12 hours. This amount was selected to be only slightly in excess of the amount
of biologically active somatomedins and thereby increase the half-life of somatomedins
present. After 17 days, wound cylinders were removed, and the fibrous tissue was scraped
carefully from each cylinder. Cylinders injected with 15 kDa carrier protein subunit
material were all filled with dense fibrous tissue that was considerably greater than
that in the controls. Specifically, 19.5 ± 7 (SD) mg of protein were deposited in
wound chambers containing 15 kDA carrier protein subunit as compared to 7.0 ± 1.6
mg deposited in controls. DNA synthesis was also much greater in carrier protein subunit-containing
chambers (1160 ± 200 ug vs 380 ± 15 ug in controls). Likewise, hydroxyproline levels
(an indicator of collagen synthesis) were significantly higher in carrier protein
subunit-containing chambers (460 ug vs 270 ug in controls).
[0112] These results demonstrate that injection of 15 kDa carrier protein subunit into wound
chambers markedly augments the rate of healing.
Example 5
[0113] An animal experiment was conducted to show that the carrier protein subunits increase
the serum half-life of SM-C. The 15 kDa human carrier protein subunit was shown to
prolong the half-life of purified human SM-C injected into a rat's bloodstream.
[0114] The complex between the 15 kDa carrier protein subunit and ¹²⁵I-SM-C was formed by
incubating ¹²⁵I-SM-C with the carrier protein subunit overnight at 4°C in PBS (10
mM sodium phosphate, pH 7.25, 150 mM sodium chloride). The complex was separated from
free ¹²⁵I-SM-C by gel filtration. Specific activity of the ¹²⁵I-SM-C was 6.7 x 10⁵
cpm per ug.
[0115] Rats (about 200 grams) were anesthetized and catheterized through the jugular vein.
Prior to injections, the catheters and syringes were rinsed with 4% BSA (bovine serum
albumin) to prevent sticking of the proteins to plastic surfaces. Four rats received
BSA, four rats received 2 ug ¹²⁵I-SM-C alone, and four rats received 2 ug ¹²⁵I-SM-C
complexed with 15 kDa carrier protein subunit. Both the complex and the SM-C were
in PBS. One rat received 1 ug ¹²⁵I-SM-C complexed with the carrier protein subunit.
Blood samples (100-200 ul) were removed at multiple time points post injection. Blood
cells were immediately separated from the plasma by centrifugation. A 25 ul plasma
aliquot was counted to determine the concentration of ¹²⁵I-SM-C present and a 10 ul
aliquot was run on a 15% polyacrylamide-SDS gel to determine SM-C integrity. Injections
were carried out over a two day period. Each morning 2 rats were injected with the
complex and 2 rats with SM-C alone. On a third day, 4 control rats were injected with
BSA.
[0116] This study demonstrates that the 15 kDa carrier protein subunit significantly increases
the half-life of SM-C in the circulation. An equal number of counts (
i.e., 1.3 x 10⁵ cpm/ml rat blood) of SM-C was added to rats either alone or complexed
with the carrier protein subunit. As shown in Figure 9, a majority of free SM-C is
rapidly removed from the circulation, whereas the carrier protein subunit protects
SM-C from that removal. (Samples run on 15% SDS [sodium dodecyl sulfate] polyacrylamide
gels indicated that all ¹²⁵I counts were SM-C; that is, there is no free ¹²⁵I interfering
with the experiment.) The continued appearance of the residual amount of free SM-C
after 7.5 minutes may be due to SM-C occupying unsaturated rat carrier protein subunit
molecules. Obviously, there were not sufficient endogenous carrier protein subunits
to bind even 30% of all the free SM-C injected. It should be noted that there are
not sufficient endogenous unsaturated carrier protein subunits in rats or in humans
to be therapeutically useful. Thus, SM-C must be administered complexed to its carrier
protein subunit.
Recombinant DNA And Carrier Protein-like Polypeptides
Preparation Of Oligonucleotide Probes Based On Protein Sequence Information
[0117] The carrier protein contains subunits tht may be isolated and retain the capability
of binding somatomedins, including subunits having apparent molecular weights, if
glycosylated, of about 15, 21, 26, 30 and 45 kDa, and significantly less, if not glycosylated
or subjected to other post translation modifications. If the N-terminal sequences
of the subunits are the same, and the various subunits are encoded by the same gene
or genes, then it should be possible to prepare a probe based on a common N-terminal
sequence to identify DNA coding for carrier protein-like polypeptides. A carrier protein
subunit was isolated and purified as described in Example 2, identified as S-15. The
protein, S-15, was carboxymethylated and subjected to N-terminal sequence analysis
using an Applied Biosystems Gas Phase Protein Sequencer, Model 470, by automated Edman
degradation. The first 42 amino acids are in Figure 1. In addition, the subunit S-15
was cleaved with the protease trypsin which specifically cleaves after arginines and
lysines, unless lysine is followed by proline. Specifically, carboxymethylated S-15
was digested with trypsin in 0.3 M sodium bicarbonate, pH 8.0. Tryptic fragments were
separated by reverse phase HPLC using a Vydac C₄ column. Purified fragments were collected
and sequenced as described above. The sequences of several such tryptic fragments,
denoted as T-1, T-6, T-7, T-1′, and T-10, are also shown in Figure 1. Due to the homology
between the amino terminus and tryptic fragment T-7, it was determined that the first
57 N-terminal amino acids of subunit S-15, with two undetermined amino acids, are
as shown in Figure 2a.
[0118] Many oligonucleotides were designed from this molecule to serve as probes to screen
cDNA libraries. These included short degenerate probes and long codon biased probes.
One oligonucleotide corresponding to a portion of the N-terminal 57 amino acid molecule
identified as the 48mer, is shown in Figure 2a.
Selection Of Tissues For Preparation Of PolyA⁺ RNA Containing Carrier Protein mRNA
[0119] The strategy utilized to isolate carrier protein genes was to identify a tissue
making large quantities of carrier protein, isolate mRNA from that tissue, construct
a cDNA library from that mRNA, and screen for the gene using oligonucleotide probes.
The hope was that an enriched cDNA library would contain more copies of such a gene
than would a genomic (total DNA) library which will only contain perhaps one copy.
There was no information in the literature to establish which tissue or cell type
makes the carrier protein, a protein which is found in the serum. Fibroblasts had
been shown to produce small amounts of a large but otherwise uncharacterized somatomedin
binding protein (Adams, et al,
supra). However, it is known that the majority of SM-C is synthesized in the liver. In
addition SM-C is synthesized by fibroblasts and other tissues such as the heart,
bone, placenta, and kidney. Therefore, speculating that SM-C and the carrier protein
would be synthesized by the same tissues, the liver and fibroblast cells were chosen
as two potential sources of the mRNA coding for the carrier protein.
[0120] In order to identify a tissue or cell line source of such mRNA, RNAs isolated from
several human livers were prepared and tested for their ability to direct the synthesis
of carrier protein. In addition, various fibroblast cell lines were assayed for their
ability to make carrier protein.
Preparation Of PolyA⁺ Containing RNA
[0121] Total and polyA⁺ containing RNA were isolated from various liver tissues and fibroblast
cells according to standard procedures (Chirgwin, J.M., Pryzbyla, A.E., MacDonald,
R.J. & Rutter, W.J. (1979) Biochemistry
18, 5294-5299 and Iversen, P.L., Mata, J.E. & Hines, R.N. (1987) BioTechniques
5, 521-523.). Either tissue (e.g., liver) or cells (e.g., fibroblasts) were homogenized
in GIT buffer (4 M guanidinium isothiocyanate, 20 mM EDTA, 100 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.6).
Debris was removed, and the RNA-containing supernatant was brought to 2% Sarkosyl
(sodium laurel sarkosinate) and 1% β-mercaptoethanol. The mixture was then centrifuged
through a cesium chloride gradient. Pellets were resuspended and extracted with phenol
and chloroform and subsequently precipitated with ethanol. PolyA⁺ RNA, which represents
the mRNA, was purified from total RNA by passing total RNA over an oligo-dT cellulose
column (Aviv, H. & Leder, P. [1972] PNAS
69:1408). The resulting polyA⁺ containing RNA was eluted from the column with 10 mM
Tris, pH 7.4, 1 mM EDTA, 0.05% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), concentrated, and stored
for further use. The liver polyA⁺ RNAs were assigned the names H10 and H14, indicative
of the liver sample from which they wer purified, and the fibroblast cell polyA⁺ RNAs
assigned the code name W138, HS27, MRC5, 8387, and MDA-MB-231 indicative of the cell
source of the RNA.
Testing Of RNA For Translation Products
[0122] An aliquot of human liver polyA⁺ RNA from H10 and H14 were translated
in vitro using a rabbit reticulocyte translation kit with ³⁵S-methionine according to standard
procedures (Davis, L. G., et al., "Basic Methods in Molecular Biology," (Elsevier,
New York, NY, 1986)). The protein translation products were immunoprecipitated (according
to Davis) with an antibody provided by Robert C. Baxter (Royal Prince Alfred Hospital,
Australia), prepared in accord with Martin, J.L., et al. "Antibody Against Acid-Stable
Insulin-like Growth Factor Binding Protein...", J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab., 261,
pp. 799-801 (1985). That antibody was raised against material containing the so-called
acid-stable subunit of the carrier protein obtained from human serum. Immunoprecipitated
proteins were analyzed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Protein bands of
about 68,000, 43,000, 39,000 and 32,000 daltons were identified that reacted specifically
with anti-carrier protein subunit antibody. The proteins were not precipitated by
a control serum, which did not contain anti-carrier protein subunit antibodies. This
result suggested that carrier protein is being made by a liver and that a cDNA library
made from liver mRNA should contain the carrier protein gene.
[0123] Several fibroblast cell lines were also tested for their ability to produce the carrier
protein. For example, WI38 embryonic fibroblasts (American Type Culture Collection
No. CCL-75) were grown to 70-80% confluence in DMEM-F12 media containing 10% fetal
calf serum. Cells were switched to serum free media and incubated for 72 hours. Culture
supernatants were harvested and concentrated by TCA precipitation or by centrifugation.
Samples were subjected to SM-Western analysis (SDS-PAGE step being carried out under
non-reducing conditions) which demonstrated that WI38 cells synthesized and secreted
at least 4 proteins capable of binding SM-C, in the size range of 25,000-45,000 daltons.
Of these, an about 40,000 dalton protein (by reducing SDS-PAGE) was also specifically
recognized by the anti-carrier protein subunit antibody. In this experiment, the 72
hour incubation of WI38 cells in serum free medium included the addition of ³⁵S-cysteine.
The proteins were immunoprecipitated with anti-carrier protein subunit antibody and
analyzed by SDS-PAGE under reducing conditions.
[0124] Other cell lines encoding carrier protein subunits that were both recognized by anti-carrier
protein subunit antibody and bound by SM-C include HS27 (human fibroblast), MRC5
(human fibroblast), 8387 (human fibrosarcoma), and MDA-MB-231 (human breast cancer).
It is expected that polyA⁺ RNA isolated from other fibroblast lines would also encode
carrier protein.
[0125] It should be recognized that the polyA⁺ RNA product obtained from these sources contain
a very large number of different mRNAs. Except for the mRNA specific for carrier protein
or carrier protein subunits, the other mRNAs are undesirable contaminants. Unfortunately,
these contaminant RNAs may behave similarly to carrier protein subunit mRNA throughout
the remainder of the cloning process of this invention. Therefore, their presence
in the polyA⁺ RNA will result in the ultimate preparation of a large number of unwanted
bacterial clones, which contain genes that may code for polypep tides other than
carrier protein. This contamination presents complex screening problems in the isolation
of the desired carrier protein hybrid clones. In the case of carrier protein, the
screening problem was further exacerbated by the lack of a sufficiently purified sample
of carrier protein mRNA or DNA, or portion thereof, to act as a screening probe for
the identification of the desired clones. The only available probes were those based
on the limited N-terminal protein molecule information. Therefore, the screening
process for the carrier protein clones is very time-consuming and difficult. Furthermore,
because only a very small percentage of carrier protein clones themselves are expected
to express carrier protein-like polypeptide in a biologically or immunologically active
form, the isolation of an active clone is a difficult screening process.
Synthesis Of Double Stranded cDNA Containing Carrier Protein cDNA
[0126] PolyA⁺ RNA containing carrier protein mRNA was used as a template to prepare complementary
DNA ("cDNA"), essentially as described by Gubler and Hoffman. cDNA libraries were
made from the mRNAs which had been shown to encode potential carrier protein-like
polypeptides. The libraries were constructed in the λ vector gt10, but could be constructed
in other vectors as well (
e.g., λ gt11 [Young, R.A. & Davis, R.W. (1983) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
80, 1194-1198]). Double-stranded cDNA was generated essentially according to the Gubler-Hoffman
method (Gubler, U. & Hoffman, B.J. (1983) Gene
25, 263-269). In this protocol, first strand cDNA was synthesized using Moloney Reverse
Transcriptase to copy the polyA⁺ RNA. Libraries described below include a random-primed
human liver cDNA library (H14), two oligo-dT-primed human liver cDNA libraries (H14,
H10/H14 [a pool of H10 and H14]), and an oligo-dT-primed human embryonic fibroblast
library (WI38). Random primers (pd(N)₆) and oligo-dT (pT₁₂₋₁₈) primers were obtained
from Pharmacia. The second strand was produced using a combination of RNAseH and DNA
polymerase I.
[0127] The resulting cDNA population is in fact a complex mixture of cDNAs originating from
the different mRNAs, which were present in the polyA⁺ RNA. In addition, because of
premature termination by Moloney reverse transcriptase, many of the cDNAs are incomplete
copies of the various mRNAs in the polyA⁺ mRNA.
Cloning Of Double-Stranded cDNA
[0128] A wide variety of host vehicle combinations may be employed in cloning or expressing
the double-stranded cDNA prepared in accordance with this invention. For example,
useful cloning or expression vehicles may consist of segments of chromosomal, non-chromosomal
and synthetic DNA molecules, such as various known derivatives of SV40 and known
bacterial plasmids, e.g., plasmids from
E. coli including col E1, pCR1, pBR322, pMB9 and their derivatives, wider host range plasmids,
e.g., RP4, phage DNAs, e.g., the numerous derivatives of phage λ, e.g., NM 989, and
other DNA phages, e.g., M13 and
Filamenteous single-stranded DNA phages and vectors derived from combinations of plasmids and
phage DNAs such as plasmids which have been modified to employ phage DNA or other
expression control molecules or yeast plasmids such as the 2 µ plasmid or derivatives
thereof. Useful cloning or expression hosts may include bacterial hosts such as
E. coli HB 101,
E. coli X1776,
E. coli X2282,
E. coli MRCI,
E. coli LE392,
E. coli C600 and strains of
Pseudomonas,
Bacillus subtilis,
Bacillus stearothermophilus and other bacteria, yeasts and other fungi, animal, insect or plant cells. Of course,
not all host/vector combinations may be equally efficient. The particular selection
of host vehicle combination may be made by those of skill in the art after due consideration
of the principles set forth herein without departing from the scope of this invention.
[0129] Furthermore, within each specific cloning or expression vehicle, various sites may
be selected for insertion of the double-stranded DNA. These sites are usually designated
by the restriction endonuclease which cuts them. These sites are well recognized by
those of skill in the art. It is, of course, to be understood that a cloning or expression
vehicle useful in this invention need not have a restriction endonuclease site for
insertion of the chosen DNA fragment. Instead, the vehicle could be joined to the
fragment by alternative means.
[0130] The cloning or expression vehicle or vector, and in particular the site chosen therein
for attachment of a selected DNA fragment to form a recombinant DNA molecule, is determined
by a variety of factors, e.g., number of sites susceptible to a particular restriction
enzyme, size of the protein to be expressed, susceptibility of the desired protein
to proteolytic degradation by host cell enzymes, contamination or binding of the protein
to be expressed by host cell proteins difficult to remove during purification, expression
characteristics, such as the location of start and stop codons relative to the vector
molecules, and other factors recognized by those of skill in the art. The choice of
a vector and an insertion site for a particular gene is determined by a balance of
these factors, not all selections being equally effective for a given case.
[0131] Although several methods are known in the art for inserting foreign DNA into a cloning
vehicle or expression vector to form a recombinant DNA molecule, the method preferred
for initial cloning in accordance with this invention is digesting λ gt10 with
EcoRI. The double-stranded cDNA is then ligated to this λ gt10 DNA, after first adding
EcoRI linkers to the cDNA molecules. The resulting recombinant DNA molecule now carries
an inserted gene at the chosen position in the cloning vector.
[0132] Of course, other known methods of inserting DNA molecules into cloning or expression
vehicles to form recombinant DNA molecules are equally useful in this invention. These
include, for example, dA-dT tailing, direct ligation, synthetic linkers, exonuclease
and polymerase-linked repair reactions followed by ligation, or extension of the
DNA strand with DNA polymerase and an appropriate single-stranded template followed
by ligation.
[0133] It should, of course, be understood that the nucleotide molecules of cDNA fragments
inserted at the selected site of the cloning vehicle may include nucleotides which
are not part of the actual gene coding for the desired polypeptide or may include
only a fragment of the complete gene for the desired protein. It is only required
that whatever DNA molecule is finally inserted, a transformed host will produce a
polypeptide having a somatomedin regulating biological activity of the carrier protein
and being capable of binding somatomedin-like polypeptides, or that the DNA molecule
itself is of use as a hybridization probe to select clones which contain DNA molecules
useful in the production of polypeptides having such biological and binding activity.
[0134] The cloning vehicle or expression vector containing the foreign gene is employed
to transform a host so as to permit that host to express carrier protein-like polypeptides.
The selection of an appropriate host is also controlled by a number of factors recognized
by the art. These include, for example, compatibility with the chosen vector, toxicity
of proteins encoded by the hybrid plasmid, ease of recovery of the desired protein,
expression characteristics, safety and cost. A balance of these factors must be struck
with the understanding that not all hosts may be equally effective for either the
cloning or expression of a particular recombinant DNA molecule.
[0135] In the present synthesis, the preferred initial cloning vehicle is λ gt10 and the
preferred initial restriction endonuclease site is
EcoRI. The preferred initial host is
E. coli.
[0136] EcoR1-restricted λ gt10 DNA (Promega) was ligated to
EcoR1 linkered cDNA molecules prepared as described in Maniatis, T., et al.,
Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual, (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, NY, 1982) and Davis, L. G.,
et al., "Basic Methods in Molecular Biology," (Elsevier, New York, NY 1986) ("Maniatis").
[0137] The hybrid DNA obtained after annealing is, of course, a large mixture of different
recombinant DNA molecules and some cloning vehicles without inserted DNA molecules.
However, each recombinant DNA molecule contains a cDNA segment at the
EcoRI site. Each such cDNA segment may comprise a gene or a fragment thereof. Only a
very few of the cDNA fragments code for carrier protein or a portion thereof. The
vast majority code for one of the other proteins or portions thereof whose mRNAs were
part of the polyA⁺ RNA used in the process of this invention. It should also be understood
that it is possible that none of the clones of the above-prepared library may permit
the expression of carrier protein-like polypeptides. Instead, they may only be useful
in screening for and identifying such a clone.
[0138] The resultant λ DNA vectors containing cDNA inserts were packaged into λ phage using
a λ phage packaging kit (Stratagene).
[0139] E. coli cells (e.g., C600 hf1) were infected with the recombinant phage and plated onto enriched
media plates, (e.g. LB). Plates were incubated at 37°C until phage plaques were visible.
[0140] The phage plaques (clones) contain a variety of recombinant DNA molecules representing
sized, complete or partial copies of the mixture of polyA⁺ RNA obtained from the liver.
Each of the majority of these plaques will contain a single recombinant DNA molecule.
However, only a very few of these recombinant DNA molecules are related to carrier
protein. Accordingly, the clones must be screened to select the carrier protein related
clones from the others.
Screening For A Clone Containing Carrier Protein cDNA
[0141] There are several approaches to screen for clones containing carrier protein cDNA.
These include, for example, RNA selection hybridization, differential hybridization;
hybridization with a synthetic probe or screening for clones that produce the desired
protein by immunological or biological assays. We have chosen hybridization with a
synthetic probe as being the most convenient and promising method for primary clone
screening.
[0142] There is no assurance that the recombinant DNA molecules and bacterial cultures transformed
therewith, which are identified by hybridization with a probe, contain the complete
carrier protein cDNA molecule or that the DNA molecule actually codes for carrier
protein or will permit the clone to express a carrier protein-like polypeptide. However,
the recombinant DNA molecules will certainly contain extensive nucleotide molecules
complementary to the carrier protein subunit mRNA coding molecule. Therefore, the
recombinant DNA molecule may at least be used as a source of a probe to screen rapidly
other recombinant DNA molecules and clones transformed with them to identify further
sets of clones which will contain an authentic or complete carrier protein subunit
nucleotide coding molecule. These clones may then be analyzed directly for possible
expression of polypeptides displaying the biological and binding activity of carrier
protein. More importantly, the nucleotide molecule of the inserted DNA fragment of
these hybrid plasmids and its amino acid translation product may be determined using
conventional means and that DNA molecule used to construct appropriate expression
vectors that permit the synthesis of carrier protein-like polypeptides in appropriate
hosts transformed with them.
Oligonucleotide Probe Hybridization
[0143] The phage cDNA library was mixed with
E. coli and plated onto LB (enriched media) plates. The plates were incubated at 37°C until
phage plaques were visible. Each plaque represents a clone of a unique λ gt10 phage
containing a cDNA insert. Approximately 0.5-1.0 million phage plaques were analyzed
per experiment.
[0144] Analysis was carried out by transferring the phage DNA of these plaques from the
plates onto nitrocellulose filters (0.45 um pore diameter Schleicher and Schuell or
Millipore), using standard techniques (Davis and Maniatis). Thus, the DNA pattern
on the filter was a replica of the plaque pattern on the plate. After identification
of inserts contained within phage DNA that hybridized to the probe, the filters can
be matched with the plates and phage isolated.
[0145] An oligonucleotide probe, the 48mer, of 48 bases (shown in Figure 2a) was used to
screen the random-primed human liver cDNA library H14. The probe corresponded to
the molecule spanning the nucleotides encoding amino acids Ala[29] through Leu[44]
of the carrier protein subunit S-15. This single oligonucleotide was designed to maximize
on bias for human codons.
[0146] Hybridization conditions were determined by binding the 48-base probe (48mer) to
Southern blots of human genomic DNA from the placenta and of a 181-bp synthetic DNA
encoding amino acids Gly[1] through Tyr[57] (shown in Figure 2b) under different degrees
of stringency. The final conditions for hybridization, which would allow for gene
identification with minimal background, was 40% formamide, 5X SSPE (0.9 M sodium
chloride, 50 mM sodium phosphate, pH 7.4, 5 mM EDTA), 42°C.
[0147] Nitrocellulose filters containing replicas of the phage plaques from the random-primed
H14 human liver cDNA library were hybridized with ³²P-labelled 48mer using the hybridization
conditions described above. Hybridization was usually carried out overnight, and the
filters were rinsed several times in 0.1X SSC (15 mM sodium chloride, 1.5 mM sodium
citrate, pH 7.0), 0.1% SDS at 45-50°C prior to autoradiography. DNA's that hybridized
strongly to the 48mer were identified by autoradiography and the corresponding phage
plaques were isolated. Since the original plating of phage was done at a high density,
a second round of plating and screening was required to isolate single plaques. This
second round of screening also verified that the original isolated phage plaques did
indeed hybridize to the 48mer. Single plaques were picked from the plates and the
phage were allowed to elute into phage buffer (100 mM NaCl, 10 mM MgSO₄, 50 mM Tris,
pH 7.5, 0.01% gelatin). After removing the bacteria by centrifugation, these phage
stocks were maintained at 4°C. Phage DNA was purified and characterized (
i.e., restricted by restriction endonucleases such as
EcoRI in order to determine insert size) following standard procedures (
e.g., Maniatis). Inserts were frequently subcloned into smaller plasmids, such as pBR322
or pGEM, at the
EcoRI site, using standard procedures.
[0148] A number of positive plaques were identified (48 per 600,000 plaques screened). Of
these, 9 were chosen for further analysis. Two of these clones (designated cLCP 0.70
and cLCP 0.77), which were approximately 700 to 800 bp in size and which showed the
most intense binding by the 48mer probe were cut into smaller fragments prior to sequencing.
[0149] Fragments hybridizing to the 48mer, which would be initial sequencing candidates
were identified in the following manner. cDNA inserts LCP 0.70 and LCP 0.77 were cleaved
with restriction endonuclease
HaeIII. These fragments were separated by agarose gel electrophoresis, transferred to
a nitrocellulose membrane, and probed with ³²P-labelled 48mer probe. When
HaeIII fragments were probed, only one fragment bound the 48mer. This 90 bp fragment
was present in both clones LCP 0.70 and LCP 0.77. It was isolated and sequenced according
to Sanger, F. et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci., 74, p. 5463 (1977). The DNA molecules
of the 90 bp fragments from both LCP 0.70 and LCP 0.77 corresponded exactly to the
carrier protein subunit, S-15, amino acid sequence spanning Gln[23] through Glu[50],
as shown below. The top line represents the first 57 amino acids of the carrier protein
subunit, S-15, and the bottom line represents the translation of the 84 bp
HaeIII fragments. The one non-match is the result of the fact that the amino acid at
position 45 was unidentified. DNA molecule analysis identified it as a threonine (T).

[0150] These clones were designated as cLCP 0.70 and cLCP 0.77, their recombinant DNA molecules
as λ gt10:LCP 0.70 and λ gt10:LCP 0.77, and their DNA inserts LCP 0.70 and LCP 0.77.
This nomenclature indicates that the clone and recombinant DNA molecule comprises
phage λ gt10, containing carrier protein related cDNA isolated from liver cDNA.
[0151] Inserts LCP 0.70 and LCP 0.77 were shown to be similar in size and restriction sites.
Inserts LCP 0.70 and LCP 0.77 are approximately 700 and 770 bp, respectively. The
restriction maps of LCP 0.70 and LCP 0.77 are shown in Figure 3a. The DNA sequences
of the LCP 0.70 and LCP 0.77 inserts, obtained by both single and double-stranded
dideoxy-sequencing (Sanger, F., et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 74, 5463 (1977)), are
included in the sequence shown in Figure 4, nucleotides 1-699 and 7-769, respectively.
In addition to the amino terminus, tryptic fragments T1′ and T10 corresponded to
the DNA molecules of these clones. LCP 0.70 and LCP 0.77 are sufficiently large to
encode 17,558 and 20,320 dalton proteins, respectively. Thus, the information required
to encode the entire S-15 molecule is contained within these inserts.
Identification Of Clones Containing DNA Sequences Coding For Carrier Protein By Cross-Hybridizing
To Either LCP 0.70 and LCP 0.77
[0152] The recombinant DNA molecules and DNA inserts of clones cLCP 0.70 and cLCP 0.77 isolated
as described above, were used to screen the library of clones previously prepared
from cDNA by hybridization to phage plaques. This method allows rapid identification
of related clones by hybridization of a radioactive probe made from LCP 0.70 to the
DNA of recombinant phage fixed on nitrocellulose filters.
[0153] Nitrocellulose filters containing phage DNAs that corresponded to phage plaques transferred
from LB plates were prepared as described above.
[0154] Either the 700 bp LCP 0.70 or the 770 bp LCP 0.77
EcoRI restriction fragment was used to screen human liver random-primed cDNA library
H14, human liver oligo-dT-primed cDNA library H10/H14, and human embryonic fibroblast
oligo-dT-primed cDNA library WI38. These probes could also be used to screen other
cDNA libraries constructed using RNAs from other tissues encoding the carrier protein.
In addition they could be used to screen genomic libraries.
[0155] The probe fragment (LCP 0.70 or LCP 0.77) was purified by electrophoresis of the
EcoRI digestion products of the recombinant DNA molecules (to separate the insert from
the cloning vehicle) in about a 1% agarose gel followed by electroelution onto DE81
paper. The specific fragment was then concentrated and ³²P-labelled by "nick translation"
by standard procedures.
[0156] Hybridization of the above probe to the nitrocellulose filter containing the cDNA
clones was carried out essentially as described above.
[0157] About 500,000 clones originating from oligo-dT-primed human liver cDNA library H10/H14
and about 500,000 clones originating from oligo-dT-primed human embryonic fibroblast
cDNA library WI38 were screened.
[0158] The frequency of positive signals in the WI38 fibroblast library was approximately
0.1%, whereas the frequency in the liver libraries was only 0.01-0.02%. Positive clones
were plaque-purified and characterized by restriction mapping and sequence analysis
to identify other clones containing carrier protein cDNA. Clones were sequenced using
single- and double-stranded sequencing techniques (Sanger).
[0159] A clone containing a 2.3 kb insert (cLCP 2.3) was isolated from human liver oligo-dT-primed
cDNA library H10/H14 which contains that full-length carrier protein-like coding
sequence. Clones containing inserts of 1.8 kb (cFCP 1.8) and 2.5 kb (cFCP 2.5), respectively
were isolated from the WI38 fibroblast oligo-dT-primed cDNA library. DNA sequence
analysis of the clones (Figure 4) showed that both contain the entire carrier protein-like
polypeptide coding sequence. The encoded protein consists of a 27 amino acid (81 nucleotide)
leader plus a 264 amino acid (792 nucleotide) mature coding region. Both the liver
and fibroblast clones display essentially the same nucleotide sequence in the coding
region. One of the liver clones encodes a GLY instead of an ALA at amino acid position
5, where posi tion 1 is the first amino acid of the mature protein. This polymorphism
corresponds to that observed in carrier protein subunits purified from Cohn fraction
IV-1.
[0160] Northern analysis of WI38 human embryonic fibroblast RNA, human liver RNAs H10/H14,
human placenta RNA, and macaque liver RNA using LCP 0.70 or LCP 0.77 as a probe indicated
that the carrier protein mRNA is approximately 2,000-2,5000 bases in size. Thus, the
2.2-2.4 kb clones likely represent full-length cDNAs corresponding to those RNAs.
Analysis of the human liver cDNA library and clone cLCP 2.3 by polymerase chain reaction
(PCR) amplification (Saiki, R. K., et al. Science 239, pp. 487-491 [1988]) suggests
that cLCP 2.3 may have a small deletion of approximately 200 bp in the 3′ untranslated
region. In fact, recently a clone containing a 2.5 kb insert (cLCP 2.5) was isolated
from the liver cDNA library. This insert (LCP 2.5) is the same as LCP 2.3 except for
a 200-bp "insertion" between the
XhoI site at 1063 and the
SphI site at 1270 (Figure 3b). LCP 2.5 is apparently analogous to FCP 2.5.
[0161] It is, of course, evident that this method of clone screening using the DNA insert
of clones LCP 0.70 and LCP 0.77, as described above, may be employed equally well
on other clones containing DNA molecules arising from recombinant DNA technology,
synthesis, natural sources or a combination thereof and on clones containing DNA
molecules related to any of the above DNA molecules by mutation, including single
or multiple, base substitutions, insertions, inversions, or deletions. Therefore,
such DNA molecules and their identification also fall within this invention. It is
also to be understood that DNA molecules, which are not screened by the above DNA
molecule, yet which as a result of their arrangement of nucleotides code for the polypeptides
coded for by the above DNA molecules also fall within this invention.
[0162] In addition, because of the expected homology between the DNA molecule coding for
human carrier protein-like polypeptide and the DNA molecule coding for carrier proteins
from non-human sources, the DNA molecules of this invention are useful in the selection
of the DNA coding for those non-human carrier proteins and in the cloning and expression
of those non-human carrier proteins for use in therapeutic compositions and methods.
Finally, the DNA molecules of this invention or oligonucleotides prepared and derived
from them may be employed to select other DNA molecules that encode carrier protein-like
polypeptides that may not be the carrier protein or a carrier protein subunit. Those
molecules and polypeptides are also part of this invention.
Expression Of Polypeptides Displaying An Activity Of The Carrier Protein
[0163] Production of polypeptides by expressing DNA molecules encoding a carrier protein-like
polypeptide was carried out in
E. coli and mammalian cells.
Expression in E. coli of Full-Length Carrier Protein-Like Sequence With Alternate
Signal Sequence
[0164] A DNA fragment containing the entire coding region of the carrier protein gene in
which the gene's signal sequence was replaced by that for preproinsulin was ligated
into the expression vector pKK233-2 (Pharmacia). This vector contains a
trp-lac fusion promoter in whch the -35
trp signal is placed 17 bases (the consensus distance) from the
lac -10 region. The presence of the
lac operator sequences allows expression from this promoter to be induced by adding IPTG
(isopropyl-β-D-thiogalactopyranoside) to the medium. In addition, this vector contains
the
lacZ ribosome binding site.
[0165] The insert (pDJ4219) containing the preproinsulin signal sequence fused to the carrier
protein gene's mature coding sequence was accomplished in the following manner (shown
in Figure 5). A preproinsulin signal sequence was synthesized in which the initiating
ATG was contained within an
NcoI restriction site. The signal sequence was followed by the nucleotides GGCGCGAGCTCG
encoding the first four amino acids of the mature carrier protein, through the
SacI site. Thus, it was possible to generate the
NcoI/
SacI fragment shown in Figure 5. This fragment was ligated to the
SacI/
XhoI fragment containing the rest of the coding sequence for the carrier protein, also
shown in Figure 5. The
XhoI site, which is located 85 bp beyond the translation termination site, had been converted
to a
HindIII site by the addition of
HindIII linkers using standard procedures. The resulting
NcoI/
HindIII fragment containing the preproinsulin signal sequence and the carrier protein
coding region was inserted into the
NcoI and
HindIII sites of pKK233-2. Expression of this construction in
E. coli induced by IPTG yielded a 25,000-30,000 dalton protein, identified by its ability
to bind anti-carrier protein antibody. Expression was carried out in the presence
of ³⁵S-cysteine. Two hours after induction by IPTG, the cell extract (cytoplasm and
periplasmic space) was immunoprecipitated with anti-carrier protein antibody and submitted
to SDS-PAGE. The ability of the carrier protein to be induced by IPTG was demonstrated,
since cells containing this construction grown in the absence of IPTG induction expressed
only very small quantities of the 25,000-30,000 dalton protein. Controls in which
pKK233-2 alone was tested showed no protein in this size range.
Expression In COS Cells Of A Partial Carrier Protein-Like Sequence
[0166] Insert fragments from pDJ4209 and pDJ4211 (shown in Figure 6) were ligated into mammalian
expression vector pSVL or pDJ4210 (Pharmacia) at the unique
XbaI site. pSVL contains the SV40 late promoter, intron, and polyadenylation site. It
also has SV40 and pBR322 origins of replication. pDJ4210 is similar to pSVL but contains
the origin of replication from pUC19 instead of pBR322.
[0167] Each of these inserts contains a partial carrier protein gene, specifically the first
120 codons of the mature sequence followed by a synthetic sequence (5′-CTC
TAGAG..3′) which terminates the reading frame. Each has a different control region:
pDJ4209 contains the entire 5′ untranslated region (114 nucleotides) stretching from
the
EcoRI site, which has been converted to an
XbaI site. It also contains the carrier protein signal sequence. The pDJ4209
XbaI fragment contained in pSVL is called pDJ4207.
pDJ4211 contains a 44 nucleotide 5′ untranslated region and the carrier protein signal
sequence. The pDJ4211
XbaI fragment contained in pDJ4210 is called pDJ4212 and is shown in Figure 7.
[0168] The vectors containing the partial carrier protein genes were transfected into COS
cells (defective SV40 transformed simian cells) to measure transient expression. Cells
were grown in DMEM-F12. Proteins were labelled with ³⁵S-cysteine. Media was collected,
immunoprecipitated with anti-carrier protein antibody, and submitted to SDS-PAGE.
Expression studies using pDJ4212 and pDJ4207 yielded two proteins of approxi mately
14,000 and 16,000 daltons. Expression of these proteins was greater with pDJ4212 than
with pDJ4207.
Expression In CHO Cells Of A Full-Length Carrier Protein-Like Sequence
[0169] The 1.66 kb
EcoRI/
HindIII fragment of LCP 2.3 which contains the entire carrier protein gene plus 5′ and
3′ untranslated regions (114 and 700 nucleotides, respectively) was inserted into
mammalian expression vector pKG3226 which contains a β-actin promoter (licensed from
Stanford University) and other functions necessary for expression in mammalian cells.
The resultant vector, called pKG4403 is shown in Figure 8. pKG4403 was transformed
into CHO (Chinese hamster ovary) cells; stably transformed lines were established
by drug selection. Serum-free conditioned media from the transformed CHO pool was
analyzed for carrier protein-like polypeptide expression by immunoprecipitation of
³⁵S-labelled products and by ability to bind ¹²⁵I-SM-C in an SM-C Western. For detection
by immunoprecipitation, cells were grown to 80% confluence in DMEM-F12 supplemented
with 10% fetal bovine serum, switched to serum-free media, starved for cysteine 1
hour, and subsequently labelled overnight with ³⁵S-cysteine. The media was immunoprecipitated
with anti-carrier protein subunit antibody, and the resulting proteins were analyzed
by SDS-PAGE under reducing conditions. Carrier protein-like polypeptides of 37,000
and 39,000 daltons were specifically identified. For detection by SM-C binding, serum-free
conditioned media (unlabelled) was collected 48 hours after seeding the transformed
pool and was subjected to SDS-PAGE under nonreducing conditions. The proteins were
transferred from the gel to a nitrocellulose filter which was probed with ¹²⁵I-SM-C.
Two novel carrier protein-like polypeptides of 43,000 and 45,000 daltons were observed.
A 23,000 dalton protein endogenous to CHO cells was detected in the transformed pool
as well as in the non-transformed control CHO pool. The size difference (37,000 and
39,000 versus 43,000 and 45,000) is likely due to whether SDS-PAGE was conducted
under reducing or non-reducing conditions.
[0170] This gene of LCP 2.3 does not exclude the possibility that modifications to the gene
such as mutations, including single or multiple, base substitutions, deletions, insertions,
or inversions may not have already occurred in the gene or may not be employed subsequently
to modify its properties or the properties of the polypeptides expressed therefrom.
Nor does it exclude any polymorphism which may result in physiologically similar but
structurally slightly different genes or polypeptides than that shown in Figure 4.
[0171] It should, of course, be understood that cloned cDNA from polyA⁺ RNA by the usual
procedures may lack 5′-terminal nucleotides and may even contain artifactual molecules.
[0172] The structure of the polypeptide depicted in Figure 4, of course, does not take into
account any modifications to the polypeptide caused by its interaction with
in vivo enzymes, e.g., glycosylation. Therefore, it must be understood that the amino acid
molecule depicted in Figure 4 may not be identical with carrier protein produced
in vivo.
[0173] It should be understood that while the chromosomal gene encoding carrier protein
activity may not be expressible in bacterial hosts because these intervening molecules
may not be processed correctly by such hosts, the chromosomal genes are likely to
be very useful in the production of carrier protein-like polypeptides in eukaryotic
hosts where the human noncoding regions, introns and coding regions may be important
for high levels of expression and correct processing of the product to biologically
active carrier protein-like polypeptides.
Improving The Yield And Activity Of Polypeptides Displaying Carrier Protein Activity
[0174] The level of production of a protein is governed by three major factors: the number
of copies of its gene within the cell, the efficiency with which those gene copies
are transcribed and the efficiency with which they are translated. Efficiency of transcription
and translation (which together comprise expression) is in turn dependent upon nucleotide
molecules, normally situated ahead of the desired coding molecule. These nucleotide
molecules or expression control molecules define the location at which RNA polymerase
interacts to initiate transcription (the promoter molecule) and at which ribosomes
bind and interact with the mRNA (the product of transcription) to initiate translation.
Not all such expression control molecules function with equal efficiency. It is thus
of advantage to separate the specific coding molecules for the desired protein from
their adjacent nucleotide molecules and to fuse them instead to other known expression
control molecules so as to favor higher levels of expression. This having been achieved,
the newly engineered DNA fragments may be inserted into higher copy number plasmids
or bacteriophage derivatives in order to increase the number of gene copies within
the cell and thereby further to improve the yield of expressed protein.
[0175] Several expression control molecules may be employed as described above. These include
the operator, promoter and ribosome binding and interaction molecules (including
molecules such as the Shine-Dalgarno molecules) of the lactose operon of
E. coli ("the
lac system"), the corresponding molecules of the tryptophan synthetase system of
E. coli ("the
trp system"), the major operator and promoter regions of phage λ (O
LP
L and O
RP
R), the bacteriophage T7 promoter recognized only be T7 RNA polymerase, a control region
of
Filamentous single-stranded DNA phages, SV40 early and late promoters, actin promoters, promoters
located on the long terminal repeats of retroviruses, or other molecules which control
the expression of genes of prokaryotic or eukaryotic cells and their viruses or combinations
thereof. Therefore, to improve the production of a particular polypeptide in an appropriate
host, the gene coding for that polypeptide may be prepared as before and inserted
into a recombinant DNA molecule closer to its former expression control molecule or
under the control of one of the above improved expression control molecules. Such
methods are known in the art.
[0176] Other methods to improve the efficiency of translation involve insertion of chemically
or enzymatically prepared oligonucleotides in front of the initiating codon. By this
procedure a more optimal primary and secondary structure of the messenger RNA can
be obtained. More specifically, a molecule can be so designed that the initiating
AUG codon occurs in a readily accessible position (i.e., not masked by secondary structure)
either at the top of a hairpin or in other single-stranded regions. Also the position
and molecule of the aforementioned Shine-Dalgarno segment can likewise be optimized.
The importance of the general structure (folding) of the messenger RNA has been documented.
[0177] Further increases in the cellular yield of the desired products depend upon an increase
in the number of genes that can be utilized in the cell. This may be achieved by insertion
of the carrier protein-like gene (with or without its transcription and translation
control elements) in a higher copy number plasmid or in a temperature-controlled copy
number plasmid (i.e., a plasmid which carries a mutation such that the copy number
of the plasmid increases after shifting up the temperature.
[0178] Alternatively, an increase in gene dosage can be achieved for example by insertion
of recombinant DNA molecules engineered in the way described previously into the temperate
bacteriophage, most simply by digestion of the plasmid with a restriction enzyme,
to give a linear molecule which is then mixed with a restricted phage λcloning vehicle
and the recombinant DNA molecule produced by incubation with DNA ligase. The desired
recombinant phage is then selected as before and used to lysogenize a host strain
of
E. coli.
[0179] Therefore, it should be understood that the insert DNA of this invention may be inserted
into other expression vectors, as previously described (
supra) and these vectors employed in various hosts, as previously described (
supra) to improve the expression of the gene coding for carrier protein subunit.
[0180] The biological activity of the carrier protein-like polypeptides produced in accordance
with this invention may also be improved by using the DNA molecules of this invention
to transform mammalian cell systems and to express the gene in those systems. Such
mammalian systems are known. One such system is the CHO (Chinese Hamster ovary) (DHFR⁻)
cell system in which the gene expression may be amplified by methotrexate (MTX). These
expression systems permit the production of glycosylated proteins. Such cells can
be induced to greatly amplify the copy number of the carrier protein-like gene.
[0181] It should also be understood that carrier protein-like polypeptides may also be prepared
in the form of a fused protein (e.g., linked to a prokaryotic or eukaryotic N-terminal
segment directing excretion), in the form of procarrier protein-like polypeptide (
e.g., starting with all or parts of the carrier protein signal molecule which could be
cleaved off upon excretion) or as a mature carrier protein-like polypeptide (by cleavage
of any extraneous amino acids, including an initial methionine during expression and
excretion) or in the form of a f-met-carrier protein-like polypeptide. One particularly
useful polypeptide in accordance with this invention would be mature carrier-like
polypeptide with an easily cleaved amino acid or series of amino acids attached to
the amino terminus. Such constructions would allow synthesis of the protein in an
appropriate host, where a start signal not present in mature carrier protein subunits
is needed, and then cleavage of the extra amino acids to produced mature carrier protein
subunits.
[0182] When the carrier protein subunit or carrier protein-like polypeptide is to be used
in combination with somatomedin-like molecules for therapy, the two molecules could
be co-produced in the same cell, preferably in mammalian cells. Vectors containing
both genes could be cotransformed and stable cell lines selected that expressed both
proteins. Thus, only one fermentation and purification scheme would be required to
produce the complex containing both carrier protein-like and the somatomedin-like
polypeptides.
[0183] The yield of these different forms of polypeptide may be improved by any or a combination
of the procedures discussed above. Also different codons for some or all of the codons
used in the present DNA molecules could be substituted. These substituted codons
may code for amino acids identical to those coded for by the codons replaced but result
in higher yield of the polypeptide. Alternatively, the replacement of one or a combination
of codons leading to amino acid replacement or to a longer or shorter carrier protein-like
polypeptide may alter its properties in a useful way (e.g., increase the stability,
increase the solubility, increase the therapeutic activity).
[0184] Finally, the activity of the polypeptides produced by the recombinant DNA molecules
of this invention may be improved by fragmenting, modifying or derivatizing the
DNA molecules or polypeptides of this inven tion by well-known means, without departing
from the scope of this invention.
[0185] While we have described certain embodiments of the invention, it is apparent that
those embodiments can be altered to provide other embodiments which utilize the processes
and compositions of the invention. The scope of the invention is defined by the following
claims rather than by the specific embodiments that have been presented by way of
example.